I was originally planning on commuting to the hospital by motorcycle but this was almost immediately shot down by my entire family both in the U.S. and India. When my relatives in India threatened to hire a private car daily I quickly settled for taking an autorickshaw instead. I could still sense their uneasiness. How bad could it really be? I had lived in South Africa for a year by myself, bought a car there, taught myself how to drive stick, and even maneuvered away from charging elephants...

And now what you've all been waiting for...
Hailing an Auto-rickshaw for Dummies
Rule 1: ALWAYS bargain.
Rule 2: Pretend to be a local (if you’re White you are probably S.O.L…please skip to the final rule)
Rule 3: If you are not a local, pretend to be from another state in India (tip #1: Instead of saying “yes” say “ahh” and learn to do the Indian head-bobble nod)
Rule 4: Never hail an autorickshaw from an auto stand.
Rule 5: Act like you know what the fare is
Rule 6: If you have no idea what the fare is, divide the given fare by 1.5 to 2 (depending on how well you hide your foreignness) and make an offer.
Rule 7: Always lowball (you will almost certainly still be offering more than the government fare of 5-6 rupees per km). Try to meet at a price somewhere between the autokarren (auto-guy) high price and your “lowball” offer.
Rule 8: If you don’t agree with the price, walk away (physically). Surprisingly effective.
Rule 9: If all else fails, point and yell “eemaatturiinga! po da nai!” (cheater! Get out of here, you dog!) to voice your displeasure. Now run away before you get stabbed.
Rule 10: Know that no matter what you do, you will still be cheated (even the locals admit this).