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Are you a good driver?
Yes 43%  43%  [ 289 ]
Fairly 26%  26%  [ 174 ]
Not so much 11%  11%  [ 76 ]
No 20%  20%  [ 131 ]
Total votes : 670

Josie
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30 Apr 2008, 10:31 pm

I don't drive. I have passed the school for driving and passed the skills test once. I am trying to get my licence now.



Josie
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30 Apr 2008, 10:32 pm

I meant I passed the written once and skills test twice.



Tohlagos
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30 Apr 2008, 10:53 pm

I drive and I consider myself a good driver. I use my turn signal, drive the speed limit, and don't tailgate. I wish a lot of other people would do the same.



FireBird
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30 Apr 2008, 11:50 pm

I don't drive and I don't plan to in the near future. Sometimes I space out and even go catatonic so that wouldn't be good for driving. I would be a dangerous driver because of that. So, that is why I don't drive. I also don't have good enough reaction times for driving. Mine are too slow. By the way I am 25 years young and don't have a license. I almost got my pilot's license though. I was just too scared to solo so I stopped flying. I want to get back into it though. It is fun and safer than driving.



Hodor
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01 May 2008, 5:47 pm

I have recently taken up driving lessons again after having had a long (18 month) break. I am ok at driving except when it comes to roundabouts (the joys of being British) and manoeuvres. Due to my poor spatial awareness, fine motor control and poor depth perception, I find it hard to control the car when doing manoeuvres. I also find that if the instructor tells me exactly how to do a particular manoeuvre, I might be able to do it for the rest of the lesson, but by the next week, I will have completely forgotten. As for roundabouts, I'm ok when I'm on them, but I find getting onto them difficult due to the fact that I find it hard to work out where the cars on the roundabout are going to go. This is probably related to my spatial awareness problems.

Still, I've only had 3 lessons since my break, and I feel that there is a chance that I might pass my test one day. But if I don't, I don't.


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01 May 2008, 6:00 pm

I'm a good driver. I drive since I was 15 years old and I am 30 right now. Nobody told me how to drive, I just stoled my dad's car and everything went on automatic. I think many of us can deal with machines almost by intuition.



Master_Shake
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24 Feb 2009, 3:15 am

"Mozart and the Whale: An Asperger's Love Story"

Donald drives a cab but rather unsuccessfully.



Eggman
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24 Feb 2009, 3:27 am

drivig is fun and easy!


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Catster2
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24 Feb 2009, 5:20 pm

Berserker wrote:
Interesting. Mum won't let me get a driver's lisence, because she seems to think I'll be a dangerous driver.


My mum would not either at 16 (learner permit age here) or 18 to get a licnence. At the time I thought it was mean but now I am glad I was not ready at 28 when I got my licence last August I was. Melbourne drivers are very impatient though and honk their horn at the drop of a hat so have had to get used to being honked at a bit as long as I havent done anything wrong or serious I just get pissed off instead. So to answer the question I think I am a fairly good driver but not excellent due to my AS and inexperience I make mistakes but none serious.



FePixie
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24 Feb 2009, 8:28 pm

I've driven for 25 years and never had an accident - i guess that makes me at least an above average driver :lol: :lol: :lol:

I think the issue for aspies is if you LIKE driving or not - if you like it the aspie brain is very good at remembering all the correct moves n rules - obsessively even - but if you dont yr aspie brain is probably busy elsewhere with one of its other obsessions and not giving driving the amount concentration needed to do it well. :roll:



history_of_psychiatry
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24 Feb 2009, 8:32 pm

I just got my license a few months ago and I now drive everywhere. It takes a lot of practice but you'll eventually reach a point where you are comfortable with it. If I can drive, anyone can.


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Homer_Bob
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24 Feb 2009, 9:35 pm

Driving itself has come very easy to me. I mean driving an automatic car is so easy. I mean, it's basically shift into drive and go and that's it. I'm sure a standard is different but I refuse to ever drive those. I've driven for three years and have never come across any problems. I however, have never driven further then a 20 minute distance. I drive to the same places all the time. I never have left my familiarity zone or I would get lost because I am not good with directions at all. Someday I will probably have to drive to unfamiliar places and I think the only way I'll be able to do that is with that thing that gives you direction while you drive. I have a brain fart right now and can't remember the name of it....grrrr.



Strapples
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24 Feb 2009, 9:43 pm

Homer_Bob wrote:
Driving itself has come very easy to me. I mean driving an automatic car is so easy. I mean, it's basically shift into drive and go and that's it. I'm sure a standard is different but I refuse to ever drive those. I've driven for three years and have never come across any problems. I however, have never driven further then a 20 minute distance. I drive to the same places all the time. I never have left my familiarity zone or I would get lost because I am not good with directions at all. Someday I will probably have to drive to unfamiliar places and I think the only way I'll be able to do that is with that thing that gives you direction while you drive. I have a brain fart right now and can't remember the name of it....grrrr.


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tcorrielus
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25 Feb 2009, 12:00 am

I'm both an Aspie and a great safer driver. How can there be a correlation between Aspergers and having bad driving experiences????? You can become a great safer driver ONLY by following the road rules and being patient, confident, and alert when on the road.



Catster2
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25 Feb 2009, 6:23 am

tcorrielus wrote:
I'm both an Aspie and a great safer driver. How can there be a correlation between Aspergers and having bad driving experiences????? You can become a great safer driver ONLY by following the road rules and being patient, confident, and alert when on the road.


There is definitely a correlation for me I have had to wait until older in life (28) as opposed to the earliest legal 18 here because I was not ready socially, emotionally, coordiantion wise or spatial awareness. At 28 I am quite a good driver but still make a mistake because of multi tasking, spatial awareness, depth perception and reading other drivers body language. For me driving is something I am glad I did but it is not easy in fact very hard and my AS is the predominant reason for that.



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25 Feb 2009, 9:33 am

I am an excellent driver. Passengers often compliment me on it. Unfortunately, I have a lead foot - damn stereo!

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