DD, age 20, is very reluctant to learn to drive

Anonymous
*opts for public transportation most of the time, but it was worth it for us for her to learn as a life skill and she is slooowly gaining confidence with it. We had her do additional lessons on the car with an instructor and it took a tremendous amount of effort and patience in our part. We got good at driving a little further out to practice on less busy roads. I’m glad we hung in there, but it has been a very long process.
Anonymous
Until I was 30 I was in environments almost exclusively serviced by great public transportation or being able to walk. I had an apartment about 2 miles from my grad school in a city and do not regret all the physical exercise I used to get.

But it did get impossible to not be driving once I I got married and we had kids. My in-laws gave us two of their cars as a wedding present (and just rolled themselves into new ones).

I have probably driven a million miles since then.

Only recently as a retired person have I gone to thinking that I can probably get by without a car at all as long as there's uber etc. Me? I'm OK. I don't need to necessarily go anywhere in person anymore. I get everything else delivered.

But, again, I'm old and know the deal.

Your 20 yo daughter will feel the lack of a license acutely if she's not already somewhere like NYC. I could never take my turn driving on road trips (I was gas money girl). I could never go out to do anything unless someone was picking me up and dropping me back home (that last one is a danger issue).

It gets harder and harder to get back on the horse once you put up resistance and dig in your heels.

Driving is a basic skill, like it or not.

In a true "emergency" people will drive for you. Also, if it's someone else's "emergency" there are people to drive for that person.

But you also render yourself effectively less useful to yourself.

It's not quite the same thing as being terrified of dogs or birds or something, but it reminds me of the same syndrome. Just get over it.
Anonymous
She can get a non driving ID card from the DMV.
Anonymous
She really doesn’t need to drive. With uber, Lyft, public transport- she’ll be fine.
Anonymous
First, identify what’s important. If it’s getting an official ID, she can get a non-drivers identification card.

If it’s learning an important skill, think about why and when it will be important. I got my license, then went to a college with a no-car policy, then moved to NYC for grad school. So I spent decades in environments where driving wasn’t necessary, and having a car would be a very expensive hassle.

If it’s a life skill issue, hire a professional. My first driving teacher provided a traumatic experience— that I didn’t realize I could complain about. My mother was so nervous that we both agreed that she would not be a good driving instructor for me. Eventually, as an adult. I got a very patient, unflappable instructor. Find someone like that for your daughter.

I’ve worn glasses since I was two, and have always had poor hand-eye coordination. (Premature baby). I say this because some of us have challenges with driving that people who don’t have these types of challenges might not even notice. Like, having minimal peripheral vision impacts your skill set, and should impact the instruction that you receive.

tldr: Offer her opportunities for instruction, follow her lead.
Anonymous
Get her a Tesla with a self-driving subscription. Her confidence will build up after some time.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:I would have little respect for you or your daughter if she didn't learn this basic skill, a life skill.


This kind of all-or-nothing thinking is puzzling.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:My son had a fear of driving. He has ADHD, low processing speed and a poor reaction time, and knows his limitations. We did not want to let him go to college without a license, however, so we taught him to drive despite his deep misgivings. He got his license at 17. He has not used it, except last summer when he was 20 to get to a summer job near our house (VERY easy drive). But the point isn't that he drive, the point is that he has a license. He doesn't want to drive at night. He tends to go slowly and carefully - we still accompany many of his drives to act as a back-up pair of eyes in cases he misses anything. Perhaps one day he will reach a point where he becomes a responsive, responsible driver. For now, he can drive in case it's absolutely needed. And maybe that's all he'll ever do.

And to the poster who cannot respect people who don't have this skill - shame on you!


+1 my DD has a learning disability and very slow processing speed with difficulty problem-solving in novel situations, which always come up on the road. She’s capable of going to college, but it’s I certain if she’ll ever drive. Would PP prefer unsafe drivers on the road?
Anonymous
*uncertain ^^
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Get her a Tesla with a self-driving subscription. Her confidence will build up after some time.


Please ignore this.
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