2025 Driver Education Round 3
Before the Sirens, After the Choice.
Saron Tadeos
Davis, CA
To me, impaired driving is any moment when a driver operates a vehicle without their full attention, judgment, or control. Most people think impairment only comes from alcohol or drugs, but the truth is far more complicated. Fatigue, texting, stress, or even a moment of panic can blur your vision and slow your reactions just as quickly. It’s misunderstood because drivers, especially ones who already passed driver’s ed or any other type of driving school, like to believe that knowing the rules protect them. But my mom’s accident taught me that real-life driving is fragile. The road doesn’t care how responsible you think you are. It only takes one moment, one wrong decision to lose everything.
At the same time my mom was recovering, I started following Jessica Tawil, a Lebanese-American influencer who became paralyzed at sixteen after a devastating car accident. On TikTok, she doesn’t filter the reality of her injury, she talks about grief, hospital memories, physical challenges, and the strength it takes to relearn life in a wheelchair. Seeing her videos while watching my mom heal made everything feel heavier and more real. Her story proved that impaired driving, no matter the cause, can lead to lifelong consequences that don’t end when the sirens fade. Her vulnerability changed my mindset completely. It made me realize that safety isn’t just a personal choice; it affects every person who loves you.
Even with these experiences, I believe driver’s education can play a powerful role in saving lives. But only if it goes beyond memorizing road signs. The most effective programs use real-world stories, reaction-time demonstrations, simulations, and honest conversations about emotional and mental impairment. When students understand the human cost of a wrong decision, not just the legal consequences, they think differently. More importantly, they drive differently. I was young when my mother got into that accident, but as a new budding driver, that memory haunts me, and keeps me more alert on the road. Education becomes meaningful when it teaches not just rules, but responsibility.
Impaired driving isn’t inevitable but it certainly is preventable. However that’s only if people understand what’s truly at stake. The flashing lights and sirens from my mom’s accident will never leave my memory, but not everyone has that memory. The horrid stories we hear from people like Jessica, who live every day with injuries they never deserved, will forever be ingrained in my brain. Because of them, because of what I’ve witnessed and learned, I know this: one choice behind the wheel can save a life. And I intend to make the right one every single time.
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An accident that made me aware that also time and impatience can be impairement
Karin Deutsch