Hi again HIT. The sensations I described above, were the start of the neuropathy. I deliberately downplayed the extent of it to my oncologist, as I was determined to finish the course and at full strength with no reduction in dose. My choice. I'm pretty much a "go hard or go home" type of person, and felt that I'd rather have the increasingly bad neuropathy than cut the chemo dose. The final upshot is not only the above (with a little improvement), but also leg weakness. My knees suddenly give way, especially when walking down a slope or down stairs. Feels like somebody stood behind me and whacked me behind the knees with their knees causing me to crumple down. Also, if I can't see my feet, I don't know where they are. This led to many stumbles when one foot crossed over the other. For my own safety, seeing as I also have ...whoop whoop... bad osteoporosis, I now use a wheeled walker. So now I too am the old lady with my increasingly fluffy head, ironing board frontage, and taa daa...the padded seat walker. What the f**k!!! Not that many years ago I spent my weekends jumping out of any plane with a door from 12,000ft for fun. Ah well....at least I'm here to whinge about it!! But seriously, if your nerve signals are not going to and from your feet to your brain, and it is affecting your safe driving, you might have to make some decisions before there is an accident. Hitting a mum pushing a pram or ten pin bowling a toddler are not options, I reckon. You running into a wall at slow speed is one thing, but involving someone else would be an entirely different matter. if your chemo finished in 2014, what you have now, is not likely to change much for the better. You only have to have one of these episodes at the wrong time and in the wrong place for it to be tragic.