Follow
Share

My father is 80 years old, is basically blind in one eye and cannot turn his head fully to either side. His driving has been horrible for a few years now. For the last number of years, my brother and I have consistently seen vehicles coming home with new scratches, dents, etc on them. My dad blames people in parking lots for these damages 🙄


The other night my brother called me to tell me how terrified he was..he had let my father drive into town and he kept veering into oncoming traffic and people were banging on their horns and swerving to avoid him. They almost went head on with another vehicle. Last week my father admitted to trying to backup to park and he came within an inch of hitting this lady's car. She was very upset at this and spoke to him in a very upset manner because he scared her! He kept saying that it didn't matter if he scared her, the only thing that mattered was that he didn't hit her car. He didn't acknowledge the fact at all that he scared her very badly and that was the reason why she reacted so strongly to him.


The day after the phone call from my brother, I contacted his doctor and they contacted the DMV to have his license revoked. Unfortunately, I didn't find out till later that evening that my brother admitts the truck DOES pull to the left a bit, however, when my brother drives it he is able to keep it within the lines and drive safely, unlike the experience with my father.


My dad totalled his old truck less than 3 months ago, and going back about 5 years, there was an accident that he swears the guy jumped in front of him from behind another vehicle and that my dad never hit the guy even though my dad got sued and the guy won $50,000. I do tend to not believe the guy's story fully as he gave three different stories to the cops, the attorney in the matter, the insurance company, and what he told my dad at the accident scene. The details kept changing. Once he claimed he went over the hood, which is a literal impossibility when you see how high my dad's front end is on that truck, another time he said he was thrown into a barbed wire fence that doesn't even exist at the accident scene, and then there was some other embellishment. I don't know how the insurance company didn't pick this out and how he still won 50 grand. You would think the inconsistencies alone would be enough.


Anyhow, my whole point of this post is to say that my dad's driving has clearly declined, and it's dangerous to society and to everyone in the vehicle. I tried to touch on the issue with him last night and he denied that his driving is bad. I told him listen, you don't want to be responsible for killing or maiming another person. Death is not always the worst thing that can happen to someone. There are other types of disabilities that can make life not worth living if a person suffers them.


I stopped short of telling him what the doctors had done, that they had contacted DMV for a revocation. I don't believe it is my place to tell him, I believe that is the doctor's responsibility, however, they know his personality and how angry he gets when he's upset so what will probably happen is he will just receive a paper in the mail from DMV saying that it was a medical revocation.


I am terrified that my name will be mentioned somewhere because he already doesn't accept the fact that his driving is bad and due to some other circumstances from a third party recently, someone put it in his head that I am only around for the money, that I want to put him in a home, and that I hate both my parents.😐 This person is after my dad's money and wants me out of the picture so he's trying to destroy my relationship with my dad.


What do I do if he finds out it was me who reported his bad driving to the Dr? I know he's going to believe I've stabbed him in the back. I am just terrified he's going to go out and kill himself and or my mother or someone else. I just cant live with that guilt. I already make myself guilty for things I know I shouldn't.

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
It is Not Disbelief That is Dangerous to Our Society; It is Belief. — George Bernard Shaw

Seniors and their right to drive, or is it a privilege? This topic, and how to get them to move into AL are the biggies.

During a visit to mom several years ago, the neighbor pulled me to the side and informed that mom was having problems getting the car out of the garage. She would ask the neighbor to get her car out the garage. This was happening more and more. When I called her doctor and informed him, I was told she can't drive and he would file the paper work to revoke her license. Then I took her car keys.

My mom was never a violent or a foul mouth person, but taking her keys I experience both in spades. I'm sure this may looked comical from a distance watching 85+ women throwing punch and string of words that would make a long shore man blushed. Since the Police dept is a few blocks away, she turned me into the Police for stealing her keys. During this discussion, the doctor was called and clarified the situation. The police came out we a compromise that mom agree to but does not remember. Yes she has advance dementia.

That night I heard her raged how GREAT a driver she was. One of the best drivers in town, and the doctor had not right to do this. She called the doctor's office many time, but the story was the same. I tried to explain the risks and dangers of her driving. She was greater risk than a 16 year driver. She knew that wasn't true, because she was a GREAT driver. She didn't care if she did hit someone with the car. Lose the house in a law suit, etc. Beside that would not happen because she is a Great driver.

There was a lot more to story. She did drive the car for awhile on revoke license. She called up a lock Smith for a new key. She had a mechanic that would make house calls when the car would not start.

So where are we now? She is not driving. Mechanic doesn't show up. She now HATES her doctor for destroying her life, but she can walk to all the places she wants to go. I keep offering her to take her to the DMV to see about getting, but she declines.

Driving is one of the major steps becoming independence. Losing that independence can feel like a jail cell.

Just a couple of closing things to think about. Just because the drive license has been revoke. The senior still owns the car. If you take, the car can be report stolen and now you are the criminal. BTW don't steal their driver license. It is there property.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Stop the guilt trip. You absolutely did the right thing. Learn to manage your response to the situation. Guilt is a useless, destructive feeling and is a way many parents (mine included) controlled their children and it just gets embedded in our psyche. At the end of the day you did the right thing and can sleep well at night. Your actions may have saved a life. And I thank you that there is one less incompetent driver on the road.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

This post is almost 3 months old and the OP has not returned.

Baily, really don't understand your reply. When my grandson's Doctor reported him, I assume it was a letter with back up showing that because of epileptic seizures he could no longer drive. It took DMV 2 months to send my grandson a letter asking him to send his licence to them. To get it reinstated, he had to prove to DMV he has been seizure free for a year.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I not sure why he would know u were the only one to have told the DMV? Don't try to make a living through crime...
It wouldn't work for u.....
Really I'm not even sure how u made it through ur teen years.
I don't know how they found out...
Doc must have told them. The computers r so tied together now, maybe when the doc puts in the medical chart u shouldn't drive it goes directly to the DMV... Idk know how the DMV found out...
U did not have nearly as much fun as u should have had in your teen years.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

In my situation, Dad had macular degeneration for years but the doctor put the burden on us; said he wouldn't revoke until we gave the ok. Before that could happen, Dad had a brain tumor and surgery to remove it. He became erratic and unpredictable, we seized the opportunity and gave the green light. I had been very frank with Dad and discussed several times that he was not going to be able to drive. The doc finally gave Dad the paperwork, who then went to the DMV with it so he could turn in the licence for a photo id. Dad gave them a sob story and ended up getting his licence back! I had to demand he give it to me, so that I could turn it in. It was the ugliest scene ever. After I did turn it in and he did get a photo id, he still tried to drive. Mom is the enabler, and would let him have his way to avoid further conflict. In the end, we disabled and later sold his car. I won't say he was "fine" with it, but we all knew it was just another hurdle to cross.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I didn’t want to deal with Mom’s anger and her ability to cut people out of relationship with her if they did something she didnt like. However, I could not live with myself if I didn’t put a stop to Moms driving and if she hurt or killed herself or someone else. After writing to the state and telling them the many changes I saw in Mom and a MCD (mild cognitive decline) diagnosis that the doctor did not report, she received revocation from the state.

Putting through the paperwork to stop her driving has changed our relationship, but so has her diagnosis 2+ years ago. She wont see a doc for anything now, as her paranoia, a byproduct of this disease, makes her think I will throw her in a nursing home. We have no relationship as she doesn’t trust me, but so be it. I cannot control that she wants no part of me, but I am so at peace knowing I did the right thing, possibly saving lives.

If your dad confronts you, tell him you did the responsible and correct thing to assist him, and potentially other drivers.

I hope you can come to some peace on this.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

Rose, I would encourage you to get a copy of your dad's insurance policy. I just read my renewal and my insurance company specifically states that accidents caused by a covered person that has had an injury or diagnosis that affects their mental capacity WILL NOT BE COVERED, unless their doctor provides a written note stating they were completely safe to drive.

If his insurance states anything similar, he could be sued for everything he owns.

I am thinking mentally impaired seniors are causing far to many accidents and the insurance companies are doing everything they legally can to put a stop to the claims.

Remember DWI doesn't mean Driving while intoxicated it means Driving while impaired.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report
JoAnn29 Aug 2022
Then the powers that be need to be aware of this clause in insurance policies. Not all doctors want to be the "bad guy". As soon as a person has a formal diagnosis of Dementia, their license should be revoked or at least limited, like said, to daylight and local driving only. They should be tested by DMV ever 3 months or so.
(1)
Report
See 1 more reply
A white lie might come in handy here…that doctors regularly check if older people are fit to drive, and it was decided he was not.

If you're feeling guilty, picture the scenario in which your dad DID hurt or kill someone. My dad was killed in a car accident by an elderly person. It happens.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

My 80 yo mother refused to stop driving as well. Her license stipulated only daylight driving only close to home. About a week later she drove right into the back of a parked pickup in the dark. Totaled her small car and did a lot of damage to the truck. Also had several broken ribs etc. Thank God no one was injured or killed. She had to be hospitalized after that, then rehab then SNF so never went home again.

I’d say do whatever you have to do, disabiling the car is probably best
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

Show/Read him the story of the 78 yr old lady who drove to the 2nd floor of mall looking for the Apple Store.

Thankfully that was not a tragedy
Helpful Answer (0)
Report

Rose...Hill: Disable the vehicle by any means possible. If indeed he finds out who it was that initiated the revocation, you can feign ignorance and at least you have saved a life or lives, possibly his included.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

If you or your brother have keys to the truck..remove it and put it someplace out of site. If your Dad asks where it is, tell him it's in the garage getting fixed as you noticed it was pulling to the right...and he wouldn't want to hurt someone or get in an accident.
You have P of A..you don't have to give him that piece of paper from the DMV..just tuck it away..and each time he asks about the truck..just tell him it's not ready yet. It might be a good idea to have your Dad assessed for dementia..and his doctor may be able to give him something to help with his outbursts.
My husband had the same thing happen to him (he was 67 years old) and I told him that the doctor had him on a blood pressure medication that could cause him to have dizziness or he could black out and cause an accident. (in reality he was on medication for dementia to help with his aggressiveness) Little white lies are not going to do any harm..but will maybe help soften the blow of reality :( Good luck..it's not an easy road you are on. <3
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

I took my Daddy off the insurance and no matter how sick he was he knew he could not drive without insurance. He hated me. He told everyone we came in contact with, doctors, waiters, waitresses, cashiers, strangers that I was the worst daughter ever. Well, too bad. I do not regret it at all. I would rather have him hate me (because I knew that wasn't him) and tell everyone that I was the worst person in the world than kill someone with his car. I changed his keys on his key ring so he could not get in the car and he was sooooo angry. Oh well, no one died and I have no regrets. I would do it all again the same way.
Prayers for you and yours
Helpful Answer (10)
Report

Time to step up. It’s not just the drs responsibility, it’s yours and your brother. The 3 of you need to sit down yesterday… and have the conversation… take the keys away, PERIOD. Can you live with yourself if next week your father hits a child?

my mom was livid when I took the car away. I had to. She wasn’t going to do it willingly.
Helpful Answer (8)
Report

Call the BMV and ask them to send your dad a letter stating that he has a medical condition that prevents him from keeping a drivers license.

This is not guilt, it is a responsibility to do the right thing. No different than not allowing your young child to play traffic or with fire. They may not be happy about it, but you are making the decision for their safety.

Guilt is what you would feel if you allowed your dad to continue to drive and he killed an innocent family or himself.
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

He isn't going to find out it was you. Call his doctor and tell him he is not to divulge who told him. You can blame it on the DMV. Tell him it was probably becasue of his age coupled with the lawsuit that they pulled his license. I feel you on this. My father lost his license becasue he was dx with Alz and he still won't stop driving. I live 3000 miles away and the only way to keep him out of his car would be to move in with him. I can't do that.
Helpful Answer (1)
Report

until you can find the fortitude to tell him, disable the car. have your brother do it if you dont know how. he can't drive if the car doesn't run.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Do you have durable power of attorney both medical and financial for both your mother and father? If yes, then you can sell the car. If no, others on this forum have had success with the police - authority figures - explaining driver's license revocation to people like your father.

Until your dad is notified by the DMV, a short-term solution might be having your brother "borrow" the truck permanently.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

It's situations like these were some cities in Europe have an advantage over cities in the US; that being so many places are accessible by walking, biking and public transit that driving a car is not a necessity.
Helpful Answer (0)
Report
LakeErie Aug 2022
A person with dementia has no ability to walk, bike or take public transportation. They get lost if they leave their driveway.
(0)
Report
Would you rather he be mad at you, or know that he drove and injured or killed someone?
Helpful Answer (4)
Report

It is your place to tell him. It is not the place of a doctor to deal with the drama and tantrums that often accompany a patient being told something they don't want to hear. Especially something like an elder who is dangerously stubborn and can't drive anymore.
The doctor did his job. He ran tests and determined that it's no longer safe for him to drive. Then he informed the DMV who will send notification. The doctor made the decision and his office informed the DMV.
You did not make the doctor's decision and recommendation to the DMV. You did not make the decision at the DMV to revoke his license.
This is the story you stick to. It's also the truth. The DMV and the doctor are not going to tell him his daughter said he can't drive anymore so we're revoking the license. The history of accidents, the erratic behavior when almost hitting a woman, and his doctor's findings are why he lost his license. If you don't want your name mentioned, all you have to do is tell the DMV to keep you anonymous. They will. His doctor is out of practice now, but whoever took over his patients will leave your name out of it if you tell the office to.
As for who this 'third party' is. Keep an eye on them. Keep an eye on your father's finances too. Don't stay away. This 'third party' is able to talk crap in your father's ear because he gets the chance to. You and your brother and any siblings you may have, need to have a meeting. You all have to be seeing dad often and talking to him on the phone to reinforce how loyal all of you are and not give the 'third party' any wiggle room to bad mouth you.
As for the guy who got the 50 grand. That's really not a lot of money. Your father hit him. That's why he got paid. This accident is also part of why the DMV took his license.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

Get his car keys in your possession NOW.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

YOU didn't take away his license, so being afraid of what dad may say/do is immaterial.

People often have OTHER people call the DMV or the cops about an aging driver. All you'd need is the license plate # and, in this day and age--possibly a VIDEO of the bad driver. I heard of one man who followed his dad while his dad was driving and when dad started doing what he'd do--swerving, missing stop signs, all that stuff, he called the cops and reported an unsafe driver at such and such location. Cops came and pulled him over and did not allow him to get back in the car.

End of story--he lost his license for good. The son didn't feel sneaky--he just couldn't live with the thought that his dad could hurt someone else--the very first day of driver's ed they tell you "Driving is NOT a "RIGHT", it's a PRIVILEGE".

Once the license is gone--introduce dad to the joys of UBER and LYFT. He's probably spending a small fortune on insurance these days. Use that money to pay for drivers. A lot less stress!
Helpful Answer (11)
Report

Adding that if your dad is well off and gets in an accident that kills or injures someone then he can also be sued personally not just through his insurance and he could lose all his money depending on how seriously he injures someone else. Even more so if it happens now that his doctor is getting his license revoked. Hell he could even end up in jail. Maybe his losing a lot of money over a potential lawsuit will stop him since he only cares about himself.
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

He's obviously no longer rational so there's no need to engage in truth telling or own up to anything. You can play dumb and say that maybe the doctor's office sent in his medical report to the DMV because both his vision and mobility are bad enough to warrant concern. If he rants about it change the topic or walk out of the room but do not bother trying to reason with him. That ship has sailed.
Helpful Answer (9)
Report
Dosmo13 Aug 2022
Someone said it's not his doctor's place to tell you father he should quit driving. I disagree.
If the doctor is aware of your father's limited vision, hearing, reaction speed (this is common in the elderly),high blood pressure ( or low BP from from medication) OR anything else that could prevent safe driving, it is INDEED, his responsibility to advise his patient of this! Speak to his doctor privately about the poor driving, near misses etc.

It worked wonderfully well with my father, who had always been proud of his driving. The Dr. suggested that his peripheral vision was not good. He suggested that a child could chase a ball into the street and with the limits on my fathers peripheral vision (vision to the side) he might fail to see the child and the result could be tragic.

Coming from the doctor, my father accepted this. His response was not anger or resentment, but instead, "Oh, no that would be terrible". We didn't urge him in any way, but in about a week, he told us HE had decided it wasn't safe for him to drive anymore. He gave us his car keys.

But we let HIM decide what should happen to the car. He gave it to a person we all knew who was in great need of a vehicle but had little money to buy one. We all felt good about that!
(0)
Report
InnerDimentions, more importantly, think about the fact that you may have very likely been responsible for saving lives thru your actions - it was just a formula for failure continuing to keep your dad driving - and really, that's the most important thing. Eventually, he'll get used to the idea of taking other means of transportation. But his driving sounds so scary and terrible - he had numerous instances of casualties and errors and why wait for the next big accident waiting to happen. You really did the right thing - being complicit in this and allowing him to continue driving may have had more serious implications in the future.

And when it comes down to it, there's actually no reason that you need to acknowledge or admit that you shared anything with his doctor - it was ultimately his doctor's decision and how and where his doctor received the facts prior - or in fact, made the determination on his own - is really not that important in the long run. Perhaps you can follow up with his doctor to relay your concerns about the confidentiality of not bringing your name up - to maintain family peace.

You did the right thing for many reasons - and hopefully you can ultimately focus more on that and find some solace in knowing that the roads will now be more safe!
Helpful Answer (2)
Report

I'm surprised Dad has any insurance after a $50,000 payout.

However, I suggest you grow a spine and tell him today that his license has been revoked, because you care about HIM as much as you do about the strangers he might kill. No one really cares what his response is when he is factually incapable of operating a vehicle safely.

As for the truck pulling to one side, that's because it's out of alignment. One of the major causes for that is hitting immobile things like curbs, so don't make excuses for his driving because of the truck's alignment issues. The truck has alignment issues BECAUSE of Dad's driving. He's knocked the truck out of alignment when he parks.

Take the keys, pull the spark plug wires if need be, or better yet, get the truck off his property.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

Let him be angry. Let him throw a tantrum. If he wants to act like that, it’s on him. But he does not need to be behind the wheel ever again.
Helpful Answer (6)
Report

Is your dad fully cognizant of everything going on? We had a heck of a time getting my dad to give up his license. But he was in the beginning stages of Alzheimer's and we told him that it was the law that when you reached 80 years old you couldn't drive anymore or you'd be arrested. He fell for that because enough people backed me up. It's just the way it had to be even though it was difficult for him. It was the easiest way for him to accept it; it was something he couldn't argue with--as hopefully the doctor's decision will be for your father. Then in a little while he didn't miss it anyway and came to acceptance.

If something like this won't work for your dad, try to take comfort in the fact that you DID make the right decision, for everyone's sake--your father's and anyone else's driving on the road. I'm sorry that this is so stressful for you in worrying about your father's reaction. You are doing it for all the right reasons and out of love. And whoever is putting those ideas in your dad's head should be ashamed of themselves.
Helpful Answer (5)
Report

It's not how many accidents you have had...it's how many accidents you have caused ...
anyway for your "problem"
Any number of people could have reported his bad driving, the people that has to swerve to avoid him, the lady in the parking lot and so on,.
Tell dad he can get his license reinstated if he passes a drivers test.
There are several ways to have him evaluated. many Hospitals or rehab programs have testing sites. AARP has a program as well.
Helpful Answer (3)
Report

This question has been closed for answers. Ask a New Question.
Ask a Question
Subscribe to
Our Newsletter