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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]My dad is an electrical engineer and since I know how his brain works in order to be one, and you say your sister has a PhD I don't think she has a learning disability like you mean. I wonder if it's connected to nerves. Kind of like when a woman is uncomfortable with her sexual partner she clenches and can't relax so thinks there's something physically wrong with her body. There is, but not in the way she thinks. I wonder if all your sister's car accidents were ways of trying to get out of having to drive. My daughter is very smart and when she was 13 and begging to go out without me, I would say "Tell me HOW you would get to the mall". It was a 20 minute walk that literally involved ONE turn. She couldn't tell me. I'd say "visualize our building. You walk out the front door. The gas station is across the street. Now to get to the mall do you turn right or left?" and she couldn't tell me. Even though she knew. I pushed her through this and now she can explain how to get anywhere in our city. I think your sister might be very scared of driving and that is causing her to not be able to think about directions. She's a grown adult - tell her you've thought about it and whatever she wants to do about driving, it's her choice and you support her, and you're sorry about how much you teased her as kids. Then DROP IT. [/quote] A PhD and job in academia is likely perfect for her, the pace, the certainty, the projects, repetition. Agree a neuro pysche could help hone in on processing speed, situational awareness, brain connectivity, reaction time, etc. all things that make a good driver. [/quote]
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