Millymollymandy wrote:I passed my driving test 1st time when I was 17 but have never owned a car. I drove my mum's car when necessary but then had a period travelling then living in London when I never drove. Tried to get back into it but I gave that up as a bad job because I was just terrified trying to drive in London.
I haven't driven for about 16 years now and the thought of driving scares me silly. I don't even particularly like being a passenger in a car, and have no idea of road rules/marking etc any more.
Yup everyone thinks I'm wierd/strange/crazy for (1) not driving and (2) being scared to drive.
I do however have a chauffeur

; it is necessary here in the countryside. He drives too fast though.

MMM, I'm in exactly the same position as you. I passed my test at 17, but couldn't afford to run a car. My mother let me drive hers, but I had difficulty with it - it was a Morris Minor, so rarely used it. Then I went to uni, so couldn't afford one, and then worked in Canterbury where traffic and parking were horrendous. It was much cheaper, faster and more practical to walk and use the train. With the exception of three of four times, I haven't driven for 10 years.
We've been in France for 3 years now, and although I have tried driving, I am terrified. The roads are so bendy - I hadn't driven on country lanes much in England, and the drivers are maniacs. The fact that it is a left-hand drive car doesn't help as it feels so unnatural.
My husband is p*ssed off with me because I won't drive, therefore he has to. I don't feel that it is safe for me to drive; I think that my inexperience could have fatal consequences. My husband hates driving, and although he has a lot of experience and is an excellent driver, he had too many near misses back in England which has put him off driving. One time on the M20, a foreign lorry wobbled from it's lane into his, hitting him at 70mph. Fortunately nobody was injured, but had the lorry hit the car in a different place, it could have been nasty.
Most people think that it's odd that I don't drive, but they don't seem to think badly of me because I point out that I hold a full licence; therefore I am capable.
I would have had lessons here to refresh myself, but they are so expensive, and you end up with the next pupil in the car with you too. As it happens, it is likely that we will return to the UK imminently, so I will have a few lessons then. I think that I'll need tranquilisers though - every time I've tried to drive recently, I have had a panic attack; something which I have never suffered from.
Not all those who wander are lost...