When Life Forces you to Slow Down in a Lane Closure
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June 02, 2026
By William Mangum Fine Art
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When Life Forces you to Slow Down in a Lane Closure

There are days when everything is timed perfectly… until it isn’t.

Recently, I had one of those days. My calendar was packed, my schedule was flowing beautifully, and I was moving from appointment to appointment like a swimmer gliding through lanes at a meet. Then came a missed appointment with a turf specialist who was over twenty minutes late without a word. After finally hearing from him, I politely declined the meeting—partly because I truly had other commitments and partly because, well… frustration had entered the chat.

So I jumped in the car to continue my errands and decided to avoid the usual afternoon congestion on Battleground Avenue by taking Wendover Avenue instead.

Brilliant decision, for about five minutes. Then came the orange barrels, flashing arrows, and the dreaded words: “LEFT LANE CLOSED AHEAD.”

And just like that, I found myself trapped in a rolling parking lot behind a highway paving crew.

At first, I did what most of us do. I fussed internally, regretted my route, calculated lost time
and mentally replayed my missed appointment.

But after sitting there long enough, I started studying the paving crew ahead of me—and honestly, it became fascinating.

Three Things I Learned Watching Highway Paving

Those roads are hotter than you think.
Fresh asphalt is typically laid at temperatures between 275 and 300 degrees Fahrenheit. Imagine standing inches away from that heat on a summer afternoon wearing boots, jeans, hard hats, and reflective gear.

Suddenly my air-conditioned inconvenience didn’t seem nearly as difficult.

Highway paving is a carefully choreographed dance.
A paving crew can lay down several hundred tons of asphalt per hour under the right conditions. Every truck, machine operator, roller, and ground crew member must work in exact timing. If the asphalt cools too quickly or spacing is off, the entire surface can be compromised.
Watching them work reminded me of an orchestra—except this symphony involved steam, diesel engines, and enormous rollers flattening blacktop with precision.

Smooth roads require rough work.
What most of us experience as a minor traffic delay represents hours of exhausting labor for someone else. While I was frustrated about losing thirty minutes, these crews were enduring heat, noise, pressure, and danger so the rest of us could enjoy safer and smoother roads tomorrow.

That realization changed my attitude. By the time traffic finally opened up, I found myself strangely grateful for the delay. Because sometimes life places us in the slow lane long enough to notice things we would have otherwise missed.

Perspective  Patience  Appreciation.

Funny how a missed appointment and a lane closure can pave the way for all three.

 

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