The Instructor’s Inner Angle: Support for ADIs
I know the weight of the dual controls. I’ve been in that seat.
Being a Driving Instructor is often described as “being your own boss,” but the reality is much more complex. It is a high-pressure, often lonely profession where you are simultaneously a teacher, a safety-critical observer, and—frequently—an unpaid therapist for your pupils.
I Know the Reality of the “Grind”
I am in the passenger seat alongside you. As a currently active ADI, I know the exact reality of today’s roads, today’s test centres, and the current financial pressures of running a tuition business. I don’t just remember the stress,I navigate it with you every week. I know firsthand the specific pressures that keep you awake at night:
- The Financial Treadmill: The stress of meeting personal and business overheads, the “no-show” that ruins your day’s earnings, and the pressure to say “yes” to every pupil even when your diary is bursting.
- The DVSA Pressure: The looming anxiety of the Standards Check, the frustration of test waiting times, and the weight of “Performance Leads” and pass rates.
- The Emotional Toll: Absorbing the high-intensity anxiety of your pupils for 40+ hours a week, often with no one to talk to between lessons except the radio.
- The Hyper-Vigilance: That constant, exhausting mental state of monitoring the road, the pupil, and the mirrors—leaving you drained long after the car is parked.
A Space for the Instructor, Not the Instructor-Role
Most “support” for ADIs is about business coaching or marketing. I offer something different: Therapeutic Support.
As a qualified Counsellor and an experienced ADI, I speak your language. You don’t have to explain the terminology to me; we can get straight to how you are actually feeling.
How We Can Work Together:
- Managing Burnout: Finding ways to regain your energy and set boundaries that protect your mental health.
- Processing “Near-Misses”: A safe place to decompress from the shocks and traumas that happen on the road.
- Managing High-Anxiety Pupils: Strategies to stay grounded when your student is panicking, preventing you from “taking their stress home” with you.
- Standard Check Support: Working through the psychological blocks and performance anxiety that come with being observed.
Confidential Support for My Peers
I provide a secure, non-judgmental “bubble” for you to vent, process, and find your balance again.
- Online Sessions: 50 minutes of dedicated time for you, scheduled around your diary.
- Peer Understanding: You are talking to someone who has felt the same frustration at a test centre and the same exhaustion at 6:00 PM on a Friday.

