I was riding at about 70mph on a straight stretch of road, with my headlight on dip and my hi-viz vest on. Although there were some small dips in the road, they weren't deep enough to hide me. I had a pretty unrestricted view ahead, on a stretch where I have done a ton before.
There were 2 oncoming cars, around 250m apart, which were also travelling at 60-70mph. A minor road joined the main road on my side, as a T-junction. When I was about a kilometre from the junction I saw a gold Daewoo Matiz arrive slowly, and signal to turn right (across my side of the road, as if to drive towards me).
I saw the driver look in my direction - she was elderly, with white hair and a lilac fleece top / jumper. I slowed down to about 55mph by rolling off throttle, and checked my mirrors. Nothing was behind me. Crucially, I also moved towards the centre of the road. I remember thinking of balancing the two threats - oncoming traffic (a crazy overtaking move? a tuning-the-radio weave?) against this person in the side road. I went pretty close to the centre-line.
I was watching the driver in the side road, and the wheels of her car. It turned out that the oncoming traffic passed me when I was about 25m from the gold Daewoo. What happened next is every rider's nightmare. She decisively pulled out, without looking in my direction as a last check. I couldn't believe it.
If I had not slowed down and changed my road position (to an assertive / defensive position in the middle of the road) I would have ridden into the side of her car. No ifs, no buts. It would have been the wing or perhaps the driver's door, and the impact would have been at about 50mph.
As it turned out, my left-hand cylinder head and footpeg must have missed the bumper of her car by less than a foot, and as I looked in my mirror (in horror) she just drove off. I think it was one of those situations where, to be honest, there was nothing more I could have done. From her perspective, I must have flashed across in front of her.
At some point (unless you want to pass every waiting car at 5mph), you have to accept your right of way, and trust others to have seen you.
I was tempted to pull a u-turn and stop the lady, to explain to her what would have happened (to me) in an accident. I would have asked her to think of others and to make sure she was SEEING, as well as just LOOKING. But I thought I'd just seem like another angry motorcyclist. So I came over all zen and just rode home.
Take care folks. And if you haven't already, call your local IAM and arrange an observed ride. Get a copy of Roadcraft and read it. I know it's not as glamourous as knee-down and trackdays, but it could save you. I think today it might have saved me...

