Anonymous wrote:Why?
What’s her actual reason for this?
Did she have learning disabilities or mental disorders or super high anxiety because of either?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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!
How badly does his low processing speed affect his driving?
He takes a beat to execute his decisions, so everything is done slightly slower than what I'd like to see. Things like deciding to change lanes, or deciding whether or not to go ahead and make a red light turn. Merging is a spatial awareness calculation that he takes time to compute.
Anonymous wrote:Driving isn’t like putting one foot in front of another. Safe driving demands skill and confidence. Please don’t unnecessarily endanger everyone else on the road because you want your kid participating.
There’s a reason insurance is sky high for teens and young adults.
Anonymous wrote:Get her a self-driving car. She will require minimal driving and she can build up her confidence bit by bit.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DD is 20 years old and very nervous about learning to drive. She needs to know how, in an emergency, and the driver's license in our country is basically our universal ID card. I think if she conquered her fears, her confidence would grow.
She passed the written test--hurray!--on her first try. But getting her behind the wheel has been very difficult ("I'm working...I'm tired...") and I don't know how hard to push it.
I dealt with this with one of my children when they were 21. We hired a private driver's ed teacher to work with them a few times to take the parent-child dynamic out of the situation. It helped immensely. That was 5 years ago. They now drive, but they do avoid highways whenever possible.