My guess is that you have never had the pleasure of blowing a steering tire on a big truck at highway speeds. I have and once would have been enough but I have been blessed several times thanks to low bidders and cheap bosses.
There are two possible bodily reactions to this.
(1) You achieve "Pucker Factor 10" in less than a heartbeat ("Pucker Factor 1" is the normal tightness of your anal O ring).
(2) You achieve "Pucker Factor -10 in which you immediately evacuate your bowels.
If the left tire blows and you are on a four lane road and no one is on your left you may be able to maintain enough control to get off to the right shoulder and stop without an accident.
If the right tire blows and you are one a four lane road you may have time to find a soft landing spot.
If you are on a two lane road with narrow shoulders I hope you have a good relationship with the deity of your choice.
Take a lesson from the Zen masters. Embrace the slow and enjoy it. Smile and wave to the people you see. You already know they wish they had one.
Be safe out there.
Blowing a tire is not the end of the world, as long as you do not panic.
When I was young I used to drive professionally and we were constantly overloaded.
Blowing a rear tire, even loaded, at freeway speeds was no big deal.
I remember driving on a two lane interstate, in the left lane, and hearing a load noise. The next thing I remember seeing was my passenger front tire passing me. When the front end dropped the truck did try to pull off to the right but I straightened it out and slowed down and pulled into the median. Our dispatcher sent the tow truck out because of an incident another driver had, the tow truck did lift the truck out of the dirt do the tire changer could put my new tire on.
The one thing I remember about my blowouts is how the other truck drivers around me slowed down to allow me the room to get out of the roadway.