I realize my husband needs to quit driving, although he hasn't gotten lost..yet..
But the real danger is in having an accident and being sued for everything we are worth, in case the accident involves a death or someone is critically injured. I took him to his neurologist yesterday and she is having St. David's hospital, located in Austin, call me for an appointment for him. There, he will be given a driving test which will surely indicate he should quit. His license will be taken away from him at that time.
I can already feel the anger he will display. He will be violent. He will display a reaction which will not be pretty. I am dreading the call for the appointment but it must be done. It will be so hard for nor only me, but our family. Each day will be dreadful, for he is used to climbing into his pickup any time he needs something, although he forgets what he needs and becomes so frustrated. His temper will be great.
I will also have to remove the pickup, or disable it, which might be the worse thing, as he might try to work on it, or get help.
I have thought of taking it elsewhere and saying it is in the shop, for he'll forget he has no license.
Has anyone solved this somehow? My husband uses his truck for many jobs he has tinkered with. His pickup is quite useful. I know he won't allow me to take him around for his needs. It is going to be bad, and he'll become paranoid. marymember
If he fails the driving test, please take away the keys.
na na na NA
hubby dear , your memories getting bad .
doc wants to see ya , and your gonna be mad .
your plowing ditches , and sideswiped a bus .
your gonna be the death of both of us .
gimmee those keys , and ill get you some ' ludes .
can it right now , with that attitude .
im not even interested , in your rebuttal .
get your senile old a** , on the senior bus shuttle.
That being said. What we had to do with FIL was sell the 2 cars and buy 1 new one that he had never driven and didn't know anything about. He wasn't given a key to it to begin with. He didn't give up easily and badgered MIL to the very end to let him drive. She held firm and we all had many, many conversations with him about it. I never felt so sorry for anyone in my life. He would just cry, it hurt him so. On the other hand MIL gradually began giving up driving to others.
Good luck with this. It's such a tough thing to do.
Be the bad guys. He will forget the cop took the keys and we will have to remind him every day but it's the best plan I can come up with. And oh yeah, now mom says she'll start driving again when dad can't. She's 84 and last drove a car about 1975. The hits just keep on coming.......
But
Be
Good luck.
Then Dad said he will have my Mom drive him.... hello, Mom is 97 and she is legally blind due to macular degeneration... he said he can still see and he can direct her where to drive. Believe me, Mom would never do that in a million years so I know Dad is just blowing smoke. But it still burns me when he talks like that.
Any time Dad tries to guilt me into driving him somewhere he will threaten to drive himself.... what I do now is tell him he needs to contact his car insurance carrier and tell them that he will now be the main driver, and not me. And that his auto insurance rate will probably double if not more. That usually shuts him down.
My parents still need to have their car because my Mom can't physically climb up into my Jeep so I need to drive their car when I take her to appointments.
When we had to take my Dad's keys away due to advancing dementia, his doctor agreed to be the bad guy. He said he was taking them for six months, after which if Dad wanted them back he would have to go to a facility the state runs where he would be tested on a simulator, then take a written test then a road test. If he passed all three, the doc would give him the keys back. By the time six months had passed, Dad was pretty resigned to not driving. When his license expired and we had to take him to get a State ID, he went back to insisting he needed a license and wanted the car keys. I told him I'd take him to the DMV, but he would have to convince THEM he was able to drive. Did not happen.
Several years ago, my mom confused the gas & break pedal so while she was trying to stop she was actually accelerating~ right across the street and into her neighbors car-port;totalling her car and neighbors. I immediately notified her doctor ~ to this day she doesn't know this~ and he instigated the whole thing with the DMV. Mom passed the written and verbal but failed the driving portion, like within five minutes. When the DMV took my mom's license away, she fell into a bit of a funk. She kept on insisting that the instructor was out to get her and 'threatened' to take her test at another DMV. I just said, 'good luck' practicing because I wasn't about to enable her in any way shape or form. Anyway, my point being, you don't want to wait cause the consequences can be horrific~ which I reminded my mom (for like a year after!)
I was wondering though, what do they use for a photo ID if they don't have a current license? Can they use the expired one?
my brother came over to my mom's while I was there and she was asleep and we shuttled her car to his house. I took it on 1 last road trip with her and then sold it.
I told him I would be his chauffeur, and because I don't like to drive a truck we need to trade it in and get a car that I can drive. He agreed and like lightening we went to the dealership and did it.
Yes, he fussed for about a year, but slowly accepted it and only mentions it in passing. I think there is such a strong connection with men and their trucks, that you have to remove the vehicle if you want them to stop. He was a good driver,
just couldn't remember where to go. He didn't even drive that much, but couldn't trust him not to get in the truck and go...... He doesn't know how to use a cell phone, so when he left we lost communication with him. I even put a tracker on his truck, but that only leads the police to him after hie is lost and they have to go get him, which isn't really solving the problem.
I got the idea from my mother, who told my father that the new car was her's to drive, and he couldn't . You will have to be creative.
It took FIVE more years and the help of the sheriffs office to get his selfish self off of the road.
Make that appointment TODAY. You may save several innocent people's lives.
What is it about this generation? They are the first to tell their family no, but they cannot take NO for an answer themselves.
Looking back, I am angry with myself for not throwing MY OWN hissy fit to get him to stop driving when he drove into the local bank. We were the laughing stock of the region when he continued to drive, wear filthy clothing in public, say inappropriate things to good friends, obsess about people he now decided to hate, etc. He was the "doer" but also the "victim" when the family closeby stepped in to "help".