There’s a moment that sneaks up on you.
It doesn’t arrive with flashing lights or a parade. It comes
quietly, in the mail. A polite letter from Insurance Corporation of British
Columbia that essentially says, “Happy Birthday… now let’s talk about your
driving.”
This year, I turn 80.
And like many of my fellow Boomers, yes, there’s a whole
convoy of us hitting this milestone, I received that letter asking me to visit
my doctor and confirm that I’m still fit to drive. Not a suggestion. Not a
friendly “if you have time.” More of a “we’ll need to check on that, thanks
very much.”
It’s a rite of passage here in British Columbia, and it may
be in your area as well. At 80, drivers are required to undergo regular medical
assessments to keep their licence. After that, the check-ins become more
frequent. You might say the province wants to make sure we’re still driving,
and not just out for a Sunday cruise in 1998.
Now, let’s be honest. This isn’t an easy topic.
Driving isn’t just about getting from Point A to Point B.
It’s independence. Its identity. It’s the ability to say, “I’ll be there in ten
minutes,” and actually mean it. The idea of giving that up feels a bit like
being told you can no longer have dessert, technically survivable, but
emotionally questionable.
And yet… here we are.
The truth is, as we age, things change. Eyesight isn’t quite
what it used to be. Reaction time has a few more “thoughtful pauses.” Night
driving starts to feel like a high-stakes video game you didn’t sign up for.
Even reading road signs can turn into a guessing contest: “Was that Maple Street,
or a new restaurant?”
The system in B.C. doesn’t assume you can’t drive; it just
asks you to prove you still can. Your doctor becomes, in a way, your co-pilot
in this decision. And here’s the interesting part: many seniors already know.
Not always out loud. Not always willingly. But quietly,
there’s an awareness.
You start avoiding left turns across heavy traffic. You
prefer daytime trips. You “just don’t feel like driving” in the rain anymore, which,
in B.C., is a bit like saying you don’t feel like breathing.
So what helps when this moment arrives?
A doctor’s opinion carries weight. When it’s framed as
safety, not punishment, it’s easier to hear.
Personal safety matters too. Nobody wants to trade
independence for injury. The idea of a preventable accident tends to focus the
mind remarkably well.
And then there’s the safety of others. No grandparent wants
to be that story on the evening news. That one hits home fast.
There’s also a practical side that doesn’t get enough
credit. Owning a car isn’t cheap. Insurance, gas, maintenance, it adds up.
Giving up the keys can feel less like a loss and more like cancelling a very
expensive subscription.
But here’s where the story takes a better turn.
Losing the driver’s seat doesn’t mean losing your life. It
just means changing how you move through it.
Public transit in many communities is better than it used to
be. Senior shuttle services exist. And families, those same children who didn’t
listen to a word you said at Mile Zero, suddenly become very interested in
giving you a ride.
Funny how that works.
You may lose a car… but you gain company.
So, can Grandpa still drive?
Maybe. Maybe not.
But the better question is this: can Grandpa still get where
he wants to go, stay connected, and live fully?
Absolutely.
And if he occasionally offers a few “words of wisdom” from
the passenger seat now… well, history tells us those probably won’t be
remembered either.