27/01/2026
Iβm getting so many messages from newly qualified drivers saying the same thing.
βIβve passedβ¦ but driving on my own feels more terrifying than driving with someone next to me.β
This is far more common than people realise.
Passing your test does not suddenly make you feel confident. What it actually does is remove the safety net overnight. One day you have someone beside you. The next, youβre expected to be fully independent, even though your experience hasnβt changed.
Driving alone is harder at first.
Thereβs no second pair of eyes.
No quiet reassurance.
No one to confirm youβre doing the right thing.
That silence often turns into anxiety.
Night driving adds another layer. Darkness reduces visual information, exaggerates speed, and makes everything feel less predictable. Your brain works harder, so your confidence dips. That doesnβt mean youβre unsafe. It means youβre human.
Many new drivers worry about being followed, pulled over, or βdoing something wrong.β That fear usually comes from responsibility, not lack of ability. Careful drivers notice everything because theyβre trying to do things properly.
Using βnew driver please be patientβ signs is not a weakness. If it helps you feel calmer while you build independence, itβs doing its job.
Loving driving is not the goal.
Being safe, calm, and capable is.
Confidence after passing grows quietly.
Through familiar routes.
Uneventful journeys.
Getting home and realising nothing bad happened.
Thatβs how independence builds.
If youβve passed recently and feel anxious, youβre not failing at driving. Youβre adjusting to it.
Be kind to yourself.
The confidence will catch up.