Drive !full! - Namaste

The Namaste Drive will become even more critical. It will be the signal humans use to coordinate with each other in a sea of sensors. Furthermore, car manufacturers are catching on. The 2025 Volvo EX90 features an external "communication bar" that can display a small illuminated hand icon—a digital Namaste.

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The gesture is just the tip of the iceberg. To truly practice the Namaste Drive, you must internalize four core principles. The Namaste Drive will become even more critical

This is a crucial nuance. In some cultures, a raised palm means "stop." In others, it is a greeting. In Japan, drivers flash their hazard lights twice to say "thank you." In Germany, a simple wave of the hand suffices. The 2025 Volvo EX90 features an external "communication

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This is an advanced technique. When you are the one letting someone else in, and they give you the gesture, the Reverse Namaste is a slight lift of your left hand or a quick flash of your hazard lights (common among truckers) to say, "I see your thanks, and you are welcome."

Tomorrow morning, on your commute, try the Namaste Drive. Let the aggressive driver pass. Leave a gap for the desperate merger. And when they inevitably look over in surprise, raise your hand. Don’t sneer. Don’t gloat. Just a gentle lift of the fingers. A subtle nod.