For starters IAM don't have instructors...observers is what those volunteers are called.
But to suggest there's nothing one could do in the case of an accident, to either avoid the accident altogether or at least minimize the severity, that's a self defeating attitude. When you've been involved in a number of accidents where you lay all of the blame with the other road user, well I for one have an issue with that. At the very least it suggests you've learned nothing from a previous accident, at worst it suggests what is referred to as a closed mind.
Have I ever crashed a bike? Yep in my early years I've had two minor prangs, both largely my fault. The main difference is that I chose to view those incidents as a learning opportunity. Did I become a better rider as a result of having two accidents? Nope, but it helped in the learning curve overall. The main variation is that I viewed them with an open mind, and it's led on to me taking part in all and any training available to me. That is what keeps me improving as a rider. Do I think of myself as perfect? Nope, but I'm doing all that I can to be safe, short of not riding at all.
As predictable as your responses are, the funny part is that the vast majority of traffic situations have a degree of predictability in them, thus one can be taught to adopt a default "safe" approach. But hey, in order to accept this an open mind is required...and as we all know, that's been your downfall.
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