LoveLisa1999 wrote:
I am wondering if anyone has the same problems I do with driving. I have not sought diagnosis for Aspergers but have autistic family members and believe myself to have Aspergers. I'm 27 and I started trying to drive at 18. It didn't go very well and I just started back in July. Right now I can drive 4 places, back and forth. I use a gps. I can only focus on what is directly in front of me and not having an accident, so I need it to tell me where to go. Does that make sense? Roads look the same to me and it is very hard to not stare at or get distracted by the lights of other cars. I stay very rigid and grip the wheel and try not to let everything overwhelm me. I can go to the same place over and over and never know how to get there and I can not be given directions by someone else. If something happens and I have to change my route, I panic and can't work it out. Does anyone else have these problems with driving and do you still drive?
Not knowing you, I can't really make a good observation of what might be going on, but I think I see maybe two different things to work on:
You don't sound fearful about controlling the car, so it sounds like maybe you are OK with that? In a way, "focusing in front of you" might be part of the problem. Some people have a harder time to focus on several things at the same time, and that's kind of important in driving. It's always something that can be worked on though. With experience, you just "know and feel" what's around you, and your mind is out ahead of the car. When there's a surprise; a rock sitting in your lane, or a car suddenly pops out in front of you, the key is to focus your eyes EXACTLY and ONLY on where you want the car to go to avoid the object. Try this experiment while walking: Put something on the floor and go back away from it as far as you can get, then try to run past it (around it; not jump over it) while focusing on it... Now back up and do the same thing, but this time, focus your eyes on the floor to the left or the right of the object, and don't look AT the object. Now, think: The first time, did you suddenly jerk to the side to try to get around the object at the last minute, and maybe almost trip? On the second time, did you somehow just swerve around it without thinking about changing direction for a second?
I'm not sure what that's called, but it's a human instinct to move toward whatever your eyes focus on, and it works in walking, driving, and in my case I've found it to be the most valuable safety skill on motorcycles. It is also how a baseball player hits the ball every time, but it is the reverse (want to hit the ball vs. avoid it). Someplace safe, you can try it in a car, by driving on a straight line, and focusing for a second on an object off to the side. You will almost uncontrollably let the car drift over in the direction you were focused on.
If your concern is not getting lost or too far away by mistake, that's of course a whole different issue, and I don't know how best to advise on that. My wife also uses GPS to go places, and she has always disliked maps and says she has a very hard time reading them. And she has an advanced degree in computer sciences, so it's not that she can't understand distance and direction. Some people just aren't "map people". I'm lucky that I have a "GPS in my head", which makes me able to just know where I am, and which direction everything is, somehow. I would imagine that the fear of the GPS failing, of something else coming up that would leave you in the middle of someplace you had no clue where, it would ruin the whole driving experience. One thing is for sure: Anything can be worked on and made better.
Charles