Written by Berdjouhi Esmerian, Brickstone Resident
“If you want to stay young, you have to die young.”
Eventually, the day arrived when I realized that I had to make a very serious decision, even more serious than the one that brought me to Brickstone—it would be wise if I stopped driving. Each time I needed to go somewhere, I had to convince myself that I would be OK driving the car. I had gradually become uncomfortable and hesitated getting into it. Once I was behind the wheel and on the road, I did well, as good a driver as ever. Still, there were times when I knew my vision was not the best, I was slower than the average driver, the GPS in my brain did not work as fast as before to get me to my destination, and at times I felt as though I was in a fog.
As the months were going by, the car was in the garage more days than out for even a short drive for an errand.
I mentioned to some friends that I was considering giving up driving. They tried to discourage me and convince me that I was a good driver and healthy and “too young” at almost 85 to make such a drastic decision. I would regret it, they said. I couldn’t survive, in Rochester, without a car, they continued.
I didn’t listen to them and just around my 85th birthday I called the dealer from whom I had bought my car, and arranged for them to buy it back. They were delighted! A 2012 Subaru Legacy with four-wheel drive, not a scratch on the body, and just 45,000 miles on the odometer.
I did it.
How did I feel?
First I had a blank and lost feeling. Then I started wanting to have my car back and drive somewhere with such a passion I couldn’t understand. Someone said, I was grieving, another said I’d get used to it, another one offered to get me anything I needed from the store. Nevertheless, I wanted to get into my car, any car, and drive. I missed it. I wanted to drive. I even considered actually buying another car. Then it hit me: I was having “car withdrawal” just like withdrawal for chocolate, or cigarettes, or alcohol. This wasn’t grief, but true withdrawal.
As the weeks continue to pass by, I am adjusting to a new way of life of planning very closely all my outings by asking for our Transportation Service or accepting friends’ offers to drive me somewhere. I recently took a trip out to the Yarn Shop through Lyft. St. John’s has a partnership with the on-demand transportation company. Overall, the trip was a new experience and was very easy for me. The most interesting thing was the technology of how it all works.
All of these options, however, take a lot of planning. I cannot just go to Eastview Mall, the Yarn Shop, Wegmans, or anywhere else for an immediate need. In the spare time that I have now, I have begun to reorganize my apartment and pick up where I left off while I was finishing So Many Homelands.
My best consolation is that I don’t have to pay the high car insurance premium for an octogenarian.