Driving

I got my diagnosis around three months ago and turned 17 last month and that means driving. I've never really wanted to drive and made that clear, but of course everyone still wants me to learn, which I understand.

During my first lesson I really tried to enjoy it, and after I was trying to stay optimistic and say I loved it, but it was so awful. It was so overwhelming, doing so many different things at one time, having to focus on all these different things.

I've had one other lesson, which I dreaded, and was so overwhelmed the whole time, once I got out the car I started having a panic attack.

I can't drive and I don't want to. I know how important it is to be able to drive but not only is it just overwhelming, it's also dangerous to me and other people. If I somehow get my license and get overwhelmed while driving I could crash and really hurt myself or other people.

I've tried talking to my mum about it as well as my granny but they both say I should do it anyway because it's an important skill to have. I don't think they really understand that it's different for me than it is for them

Any advice is really appreciated :)

Parents
  • Split the task into smaller chunks.       There are 4 parts to driving - 1, learning to work the car's controls - do that off road in a car park until you get the coordination sorted.    2, learning the paper stuff - road signs, lane positions, braking distances etc.     That's just evenings at home with the highway code.     3,   putting all together - there are lots of closed-course driver training places for teaching 16-year olds to drive so they can pass their test on their 17th birthday or for nervous lerners.       4,   Getting out and doing it all with other cars around you - like a normal driving lesson - but if you're sorted with 1, 2 and 3, that will be a piece of cake for you..

    Another option is to learn in an automatic - that's just like Mario Karts - so much easier than messing around with clutch & gears.   Autos are much better at dealing with today's stop-start traffic and so much more relaxing to drive.

  • I like the automatice idea ,,,,,, as we move to electric being an automatic only license will become less relevant. Most ( 95% ) of electric cars have only one pedal :)

  • Exactly - all electrics are 'auto' anyway.      Autos had a bad rap in the 60s because they were only 2-speed - so needed big engines with lots of torque so they we only fitted to bigger cars.   Since the 80s with the advent of 4-speed autos, they became the equivalent of manuals and could be fitted to small engines without them running out of puff at 40mph.    I can drive both but I love autos - so much more civilised that stamping on pedals and stirring the box.

  • yea took me a while to work it out and I used my car from then on Slight smile my co-workers in work where in stitches about it. 

  • The only people walking along roads in the US are bums & drifters - and you've seen Rambo haven't you?

  • blimely I would have been too scared  to say anything. I was stopped loads of times but when they heard my accent I usually got off because I was just a "visitor/tourist." working in USA for short period. I was  stopped 3/4 times for working on the edge of the road. I sometimes worked to work. The police assumed I was crazy, ....thats what they said Slight smile   ( use your car crazy person ! )

  • Nope - totally clean - only ever been pulled over twice-  once for going through a no entry - had a stop & produce for that - went to the cop shop and the girl behind the counter was putting the information into a big ledger - I asked how many they get per day - a full ledger's worth!   How many had MOT, tax & insurance?    I was the first!!!

    The second was coming off a big roundabout near where I live - a Skoda Octavia VRS was in the wrong place doing the wrong thing and changed lane into the side of me - I braked and nearly had to go up the kerb to avoid an accident.  

    The road split into two just after, I was going left, they went right.    I was shaking my head at the appalling driving as I powered off up the hill.       Next thing I've got the VRS up my bum doing a road rage - so I hit the loud pedal and left it for dead (2.6 litre Omega) 70 in a 30 limit - until I heard sirens!      VRS was an unmarked plod pursuit car,.   I pulled over and plod jumped out so I explained to them about their atrocious driving - they told me off to feel superior and let me go.   Muppets.   Smiley

Reply
  • Nope - totally clean - only ever been pulled over twice-  once for going through a no entry - had a stop & produce for that - went to the cop shop and the girl behind the counter was putting the information into a big ledger - I asked how many they get per day - a full ledger's worth!   How many had MOT, tax & insurance?    I was the first!!!

    The second was coming off a big roundabout near where I live - a Skoda Octavia VRS was in the wrong place doing the wrong thing and changed lane into the side of me - I braked and nearly had to go up the kerb to avoid an accident.  

    The road split into two just after, I was going left, they went right.    I was shaking my head at the appalling driving as I powered off up the hill.       Next thing I've got the VRS up my bum doing a road rage - so I hit the loud pedal and left it for dead (2.6 litre Omega) 70 in a 30 limit - until I heard sirens!      VRS was an unmarked plod pursuit car,.   I pulled over and plod jumped out so I explained to them about their atrocious driving - they told me off to feel superior and let me go.   Muppets.   Smiley

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