Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Reading OP’s letter, he HAS STOPPED driving.
The question is if he can avoid jail time, and if not, how it impacts future education and employment.
HAS HE THOUGH? Or has he just told OP that he has, and OP is believing him?
Sorry but in some young men, the yearning for risky behavior is not easily suppressed and he will likely be back at it as soon as he finds a way he thinks he can do it.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah but the employed reckless pass em all spouse above won't be 65 for a long time. Family should act to get them off the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be clear, you need to get him an attorney to work on a deal.
This.
I would add that my adhd /asd employed husband is also a terrible driver. His level of attentiveness is low.c poor situational awareness and he cannot predict basic things, and he has zero sense of speed. Thus he’s usually speeding. And doesn’t look at the speedometer. On freeways his MO is to jsut pass everyone he sees because…. That’s driving to him!
I minimize him driving the kids at all times. Meaning I do the family driving when we are all together or a nanny does. When his parents visit they don’t want him driving them either, so I have too. He speeds and goes through new red lights, rolling stops, has no sense of direction (gps saved him when it came out).
He really should t be driving.
I’m surprised no one had looked into the correlation between driving “accidents” and who at fault had untreated adhd or asd.
If I were a car insurance company I sure would.
When he kills or maims people your nice little family is going to get sued up the wazoo. You are apparently ok with that so long as it's strangers. And he stays employed.
He needs to be hotten off the road.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To be clear, you need to get him an attorney to work on a deal.
This.
I would add that my adhd /asd employed husband is also a terrible driver. His level of attentiveness is low.c poor situational awareness and he cannot predict basic things, and he has zero sense of speed. Thus he’s usually speeding. And doesn’t look at the speedometer. On freeways his MO is to jsut pass everyone he sees because…. That’s driving to him!
I minimize him driving the kids at all times. Meaning I do the family driving when we are all together or a nanny does. When his parents visit they don’t want him driving them either, so I have too. He speeds and goes through new red lights, rolling stops, has no sense of direction (gps saved him when it came out).
He really should t be driving.
I’m surprised no one had looked into the correlation between driving “accidents” and who at fault had untreated adhd or asd.
If I were a car insurance company I sure would.
Anonymous wrote:I have a similar kid, OP, so I am incredibly proud for what your son has accomplished.
And I am relieved that the mental health stuff will mean nothing to a judge. Maturity means knowing what you can’t handle - and your son can’t drive safely so he can’t drive.
It will cause logistics and financial problems, yes, as does for people with vision problems and people with epilepsy and others who can’t drive. But HE CANNOT DRIVE.
Surrender his license to the DMV on Monday.
Anonymous wrote:To be clear, you need to get him an attorney to work on a deal.
Anonymous wrote:OP - Your son is a public danger. Do you need to see someone killed in a horrible accident to understand that his reckless behavior needs to be penalized?
Anonymous wrote:Reading OP’s letter, he HAS STOPPED driving.
The question is if he can avoid jail time, and if not, how it impacts future education and employment.