.... My dad doesn't want to stop driving. I accept that I cant force him , I do however express my opinion strongly.His recent accidents, remind me so much of when my kids were learning to drive , well they got the license but would do things like tear the front bumper and nose off on a guard rail and then bring it home for me to do my magic with duck tape and my favorite drywall screws. Maybe thats why i feel like its repeating .
In my case he had a stroke 4 years ago and amazingly recovered. But it still causes some vision perferal problems and as well as some times not thinking quickly.
I compare it to the computer.
its called LAG. Ask it something and it hesitates but finally gets the point.
What you describe sounds similar to what I went through with my dad.
Slow reactions, lack of observation, very poor peripheral vision, near deaf, slow mentally.... The real tell tales were the growing variety of dents in the car that were caused by "someone hitting me in a parking lot". Then he put the car in a ditch, because it was "too dark". He also missed his exit on the freeway because it was snowing and forgot how to get home from the next exit. Etc....
Here's the hard reality. If my dad had not, or your dad does not get off
the road ASAP it's a game of diminishing returns. Every time they get
behind the wheel it's closer to the probability of their or someone elses injury or destruction.
My dad protested that he'd been driving for xx years and had never had a crash (except the ditch and parking lots perhaps). What I tried to sell him on was that it was much better to quit while he was ahead. Go out clean. Quit BEFORE he hurt himself or someone else. "Go out in style" I said, rather than with a nightmare to last you and the rest of us the rest of our lives. Again, tough stuff to deal with...
At one point he ended up in the hospital with pneumonia. When he got out, I told him I would be his driver from now on. He kept grousing to folks that I had hidden his car keys when if fact they were hanging on the key rack in the kitchen, in plain sight. I doubt I'll ever figure out if he really couldn't find them or he was just using this statement as a way of saving face and getting some digs in. At 93 he's now in dementia care.
You say you can't force him to stop driving, and this is true in an immediate legal sense, but you can certainly bring all his deficits to the attention of the authorities, his insurance company, and lean on his doctor to do what is right for the rest of society. Insurance companies really get excited about this kind of thing and might require a physical at a doctor they select. Your dad wouldn't drive without insurance would he? That's illegal. He can blame "them". You will probably feel as if you are betraying your father, and you may have to take a fair bit of abuse for a while, but, BUT, the alternatives are no less tasteful.
Enlist the help/conspiracy of family and friends who share your concerns. Make it a project. If you are sneaky enough, and no one rats you out, dad will blame "them" instead of taking it out on you. The world will thank you. You WILL have done the right thing.
Everyone has to stop driving sometime, providing they live long enough to come to that point. Everyone will die. Best to do your dying by yourself and not selfishly take others with you.
Two stories I tell my driving students relate to old drivers:
One was an 90 something old man in CA several years back who launched his car into a pedestrian mall. He killed 13 people as I recall, before his car crashed out. "His gas pedal got stuck", and standing on the brake did nothing. Riiiiight....
The other happened right here in my neck of the woods. Some old gal
was angle parking in front of a travel agency. She got the pedals mixed up and crashed through the front of the agency, killing a travel agent sitting at her desk.
Also, as a motorcycle rider, I have heard numerous stories of old folks
pulling out or turning in front of oncoming bikes because "they did not
see them". The bike rider frequently does not survive this type of encounter. This situation is not limited to older drivers, but is more likely with reduced vision and attention.
Driving is a heavy responsibility, and in my view, taken way to lightly by most folks. My casual research has led me to believe that probably only 10% of drivers are really squared away, 10% are downright dangerous at any given moment, and the other 80% get it right most of the time. Personally, I drive very defensively, as if the other drivers are going to try to get me. It's a combat zone out there. Assume nothing, know all the rules and be self critical of your skills and abilities.
Off the soapbox....
Good night and good luck ;' > (somebody say that before?)
Dennis