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Old 10-11-2016, 06:35 PM
 
1,502 posts, read 2,668,280 times
Reputation: 641

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I didn't know where else to post it, so I'll post it here.

When I was 20, I drove long distances without stopping. I drove from ~Miami to ~DC in less than 14 hours at over 100 mph for the entire distance.

I did so when the roads were emptier in loud sports cars with open exhausts. Gauges were abundant, music was obnoxious (if I could even hear it).

I topped out many a car on the open highway as well.

Then divorce struck and I had no money. I once had to drive from ~Miami to Franconia Notch, New Hampshire non-stop in a $200 car.

I was about 27 years old then.

Even since I took that trip, I can't drive more than 50 miles without becoming severely tired.

I am now in my early 40's and faced with a situation where I must drive my family 170 miles/3 hours each direction once a week between residences. I do so at or below the speed limit since I am with my family and the laws are extremely strict in Virginia.

I feel completely fatigued after about 45 minutes and think that my driving habits when I was young along with that trip to NH did me in for life.

No amount of Coffee, Monster Drinks, or anything else help. All they force me to do is use the bathroom all the time even if I take a sip or two due to the diuretics.

My father is almost 80 and he doesn't suffer these issues on road trips. Then again, he drove at or below the speed limit his whole life.

This is probably a health or psychological issue at this point, but I'd like some thoughts on how to hear from other drivers.

Concern trolling is welcome as long as I get some helpful posts. I had a good time when I was young and never hurt anyone. I am far more dangerous with my decade old perfect sheeple type driving record on the open road with my inability to keep awake these days.

Thank you.
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Old 10-11-2016, 06:48 PM
 
Location: San Francisco
21,541 posts, read 8,724,324 times
Reputation: 64803
It could be psychological, va_lucky, but I would suggest that you visit your primary physician, tell him that you're experiencing pronounced fatigue after driving a relatively short distance, and ask for a complete workup including lab tests. The fatigue you're describing isn't normal, especially since it's a new symptom. I am no medical expert, but I am guessing that if the cause were merely psychological, then caffeine would have some effect. Definitely get checked out and don't give up until you get an answer. Good luck, and please let us know how things turn out.
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Old 10-11-2016, 06:51 PM
 
Location: Sugarmill Woods , FL
6,234 posts, read 8,442,558 times
Reputation: 13809
Have a sleep study done!
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Old 10-11-2016, 07:02 PM
 
17,619 posts, read 17,665,401 times
Reputation: 25686
Check with your family doctor. Could be a sleep issue. Could be a vascular issue. Go see a professional.
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Old 10-11-2016, 07:13 PM
 
1,502 posts, read 2,668,280 times
Reputation: 641
Thank you for the thoughts everyone! I have always had great blood work since the incident. I wonder about the sleep thing, I really do. I have for the longest time been able to enjoy carpools and public transportation. I also have a horrible memory....I attribute that to the fact that I'd rather forget most things in my life.

Some of me thinks that by driving like a lunatic when younger, my sensitivities were extremely heightened. I always had to be on high alert when driving for obvious reasons.

Now driving is second nature and mundane.
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Old 10-11-2016, 07:13 PM
 
Location: Kirkland, WA (Metro Seattle)
6,033 posts, read 6,147,063 times
Reputation: 12529
Sounds medical, in my layman's opinion.

I've done thousand mile days on motorcycles (three times, 2 of 3 verified for Iron Butt certifications, third just for fun). By car, twice for sure. Tons of 700-800 mile days on both. Most of this in my 30s, some in my 40s, once in my 20s.

I wear earplugs religiously while riding, to preserve my already low-normal hearing.

I wonder if you're having some sort of sensory overload problem, be it auditory or visual. I never get that tensed-up while driving or riding, then or now, so long days through today don't bother me much. I raced motorcycles for three seasons twenty years ago, that didn't affect anything other than my interpretation everyone is going far too slow for their own good. I've driven cars closed-course; same observation, mostly around "wow, amazing how much performance potential Porsches have" (same applies to BMW M3/M4, Ferrari-anything, Lamborghini-anything, others).

Given sufficient lack-of law enforcement presence, possible to find out West here in certain places off the interstates, it is entirely possible to cruise for long stretches at supra-legal speeds while harming nothing other than my gas mileage. My Porsche Turbo *wanted* to go a buck-ten, and stay there. Sadly, the police feel otherwise in this country. Our loss. Point being none of that bothers (or bother-ed) me, in the sensory meaning of the phrase, or affected my ability to drive legal speeds for distance.
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Old 10-11-2016, 07:30 PM
 
18,547 posts, read 15,584,312 times
Reputation: 16235
Quote:
Originally Posted by va_lucky View Post
I didn't know where else to post it, so I'll post it here.

When I was 20, I drove long distances without stopping. I drove from ~Miami to ~DC in less than 14 hours at over 100 mph for the entire distance.

I did so when the roads were emptier in loud sports cars with open exhausts. Gauges were abundant, music was obnoxious (if I could even hear it).

I topped out many a car on the open highway as well.

Then divorce struck and I had no money. I once had to drive from ~Miami to Franconia Notch, New Hampshire non-stop in a $200 car.

I was about 27 years old then.

Even since I took that trip, I can't drive more than 50 miles without becoming severely tired.

I am now in my early 40's and faced with a situation where I must drive my family 170 miles/3 hours each direction once a week between residences. I do so at or below the speed limit since I am with my family and the laws are extremely strict in Virginia.

I feel completely fatigued after about 45 minutes and think that my driving habits when I was young along with that trip to NH did me in for life.

No amount of Coffee, Monster Drinks, or anything else help. All they force me to do is use the bathroom all the time even if I take a sip or two due to the diuretics.

My father is almost 80 and he doesn't suffer these issues on road trips. Then again, he drove at or below the speed limit his whole life.

This is probably a health or psychological issue at this point, but I'd like some thoughts on how to hear from other drivers.

Concern trolling is welcome as long as I get some helpful posts. I had a good time when I was young and never hurt anyone. I am far more dangerous with my decade old perfect sheeple type driving record on the open road with my inability to keep awake these days.

Thank you.
Does it seem worse when you are contending with glare from the sun? I've had my squinting reflex kick in and at times mistook the feeling for fatigue when it was actually just glare. I don't know if this is your case or not, however.
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Old 10-11-2016, 07:37 PM
 
Location: NE Mississippi
25,573 posts, read 17,281,298 times
Reputation: 37310
Quote:
Originally Posted by va_lucky View Post
i didn't know where else to post it, so i'll post it here.

When i was 20, i drove long distances without stopping. I drove from ~miami to ~dc in less than 14 hours at over 100 mph for the entire distance.

I did so when the roads were emptier in loud sports cars with open exhausts. Gauges were abundant, music was obnoxious (if i could even hear it).

I topped out many a car on the open highway as well.

Then divorce struck and i had no money. I once had to drive from ~miami to franconia notch, new hampshire non-stop in a $200 car.

I was about 27 years old then.

Even since i took that trip, i can't drive more than 50 miles without becoming severely tired.

I am now in my early 40's and faced with a situation where i must drive my family 170 miles/3 hours each direction once a week between residences. I do so at or below the speed limit since i am with my family and the laws are extremely strict in virginia.

I feel completely fatigued after about 45 minutes and think that my driving habits when i was young along with that trip to nh did me in for life.

No amount of coffee, monster drinks, or anything else help. All they force me to do is use the bathroom all the time even if i take a sip or two due to the diuretics.

My father is almost 80 and he doesn't suffer these issues on road trips. Then again, he drove at or below the speed limit his whole life.

This is probably a health or psychological issue at this point, but i'd like some thoughts on how to hear from other drivers.

Concern trolling is welcome as long as i get some helpful posts. I had a good time when i was young and never hurt anyone. I am far more dangerous with my decade old perfect sheeple type driving record on the open road with my inability to keep awake these days.

Thank you.
carbon monoxide from a leaking exhaust system!
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Old 10-11-2016, 07:40 PM
 
Location: Texas
3,251 posts, read 2,553,104 times
Reputation: 3127
Quote:
Originally Posted by va_lucky View Post
I didn't know where else to post it, so I'll post it here.

When I was 20, I drove long distances without stopping. I drove from ~Miami to ~DC in less than 14 hours at over 100 mph for the entire distance.

I did so when the roads were emptier in loud sports cars with open exhausts. Gauges were abundant, music was obnoxious (if I could even hear it).

I topped out many a car on the open highway as well.

Then divorce struck and I had no money. I once had to drive from ~Miami to Franconia Notch, New Hampshire non-stop in a $200 car.

I was about 27 years old then.

Even since I took that trip, I can't drive more than 50 miles without becoming severely tired.

I am now in my early 40's and faced with a situation where I must drive my family 170 miles/3 hours each direction once a week between residences. I do so at or below the speed limit since I am with my family and the laws are extremely strict in Virginia.

I feel completely fatigued after about 45 minutes and think that my driving habits when I was young along with that trip to NH did me in for life.

No amount of Coffee, Monster Drinks, or anything else help. All they force me to do is use the bathroom all the time even if I take a sip or two due to the diuretics.

My father is almost 80 and he doesn't suffer these issues on road trips. Then again, he drove at or below the speed limit his whole life.

This is probably a health or psychological issue at this point, but I'd like some thoughts on how to hear from other drivers.

Concern trolling is welcome as long as I get some helpful posts. I had a good time when I was young and never hurt anyone. I am far more dangerous with my decade old perfect sheeple type driving record on the open road with my inability to keep awake these days.

Thank you.
Buy a quicker car. I used to hate driving until I bought a car and modded it until it will take down most modern v8 you see on the daily.
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Old 10-11-2016, 07:47 PM
 
Location: North West Arkansas (zone 6b)
2,776 posts, read 3,248,094 times
Reputation: 3913
I had a similar issue when I drove with undiagnosed sleep apnea, another time I was getting drowsy when it was my turn to drive during a road trip which I discovered was due to my high blood pressure medicine..

After switching medicine and getting a CPAP machine I can drive road trips for a few hours at a stretch without much fatigue
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