The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
Car accidentswise-kestrel-256

10 months out from a bad crash and I feel like my body and my job are both falling apart

I don't even know where to start. Almost a year ago I was rear-ended on the freeway during a construction backup — the truck behind me never slowed down. No broken bones, so everyone kind of acts like I'm fine. I am not fine.

I started a demanding new job about three weeks after the crash because I had no choice financially. It's a client-facing role with a lot of emotional labor involved, long hours, and almost no flexibility. I've been grinding through it on a cocktail of anti-inflammatories and muscle relaxers that my doctor okayed short-term... except it's now been months and 'short-term' has quietly become my entire life.

My chiropractor, my physio, and the massage therapist I've been seeing have all basically said the same thing: my nervous system is stuck in overdrive, my soft tissue isn't healing the way it should, and I need to actually rest — not just 'rest between 11pm and 6am.' My whole core is tight all the time. I have flare-ups where I can barely sit at a desk, which is literally my entire job.

I asked my GP to support me taking a short leave and she kind of... hedged? Said she wants more documentation from my specialists before she'll sign anything. Meanwhile my employer told me that my 'work from home days' are becoming a pattern they can't keep accommodating.

I'm also terrified to drive on the highway. I take back roads everywhere now which adds 40 minutes to my commute each way. I'm exhausted, in pain, and honestly starting to feel like the system — medical, insurance, employment — is just designed to wait you out until you give up.

Has anyone else dealt with this? How do you even prove to everyone that soft tissue and psych stuff is real when there's nothing on an X-ray?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 16
    humble-fox-023

    The 'nothing showed up on imaging so you must be okay' thing makes me want to scream. I had a very similar situation after a highway collision — soft tissue, nervous system chaos, the works. What finally helped me was getting a physiatrist (physical medicine doctor) involved. They actually specialize in exactly this kind of injury and their documentation carries a lot more weight than a GP's note when it comes to insurance and disability paperwork. It took me a while to figure that out and I wish someone had told me sooner.

    • 5
      quiet-optimist675

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 12
    calm-fox-659

    What you're describing — the persistent muscle tension, GI problems, sleep disruption, hypervigilance while driving — that's a really classic picture of your autonomic nervous system being stuck in fight-or-flight after trauma. It's real, it's measurable, and it absolutely slows soft tissue healing because your body never fully shifts into repair mode. Push hard for a referral to a trauma-informed therapist or even a somatic therapist alongside your physio. It's not 'just stress.' The physical and psychological stuff are feeding each other and they kind of have to be treated together.

    • 14
      mellow-grouse-829

      Not legal advice, but the combination of soft tissue injury, documented psychological impact, and a demonstrable effect on your ability to work is exactly the kind of multi-layered claim that tends to get undervalued when people handle it alone. The 'nothing on the X-ray' defense from insurers is very beatable with the right medical evidence — it just has to be built correctly over time. If you haven't at least had a free consultation with a personal injury attorney, it might be worth it just to understand what your claim could actually look like.

  • 11
    candid-kestrel-287

    Please be careful about what you say to your insurance adjuster during this stretch. I've seen people casually mention they've been working full-time and the insurer uses that to argue the injuries aren't that limiting. It doesn't mean you weren't hurt — it means you were broke and had no other option — but they will absolutely spin it. Document everything, keep your own records, and don't give recorded statements without understanding what you're agreeing to.

    • 15
      quick-tern-440

      Ten months in is actually still relatively early for a complex nervous system and soft tissue case — I know that doesn't feel encouraging when you're in it, but it means you're not 'too late' to get the right support in place and still see real improvement. A lot of people I've talked to in this community have turned a corner once they got proper treatment and actually took the leave their bodies were asking for. You figuring out now that the current situation isn't sustainable is actually the first step.

    • 0
      tired-passenger550

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 15
    patient-marmot-186

    Honestly, working through an injury because you couldn't afford not to is incredibly common and it is also one of the things adjusters are trained to flag as a reason to low-ball a claim. I'm not saying that's right — it isn't — but the logic they use internally is 'if they could work, how bad could it be?' The counter to that is thorough, consistent medical records showing ongoing treatment and the specific ways the injury impacts your functioning. Every appointment, every note, every referral matters. Keep copies of everything.

  • 19
    daring-marmot-669

    For the GP documentation issue — it might help to come in with a written summary of your symptoms, a list of all the providers you're seeing, and specifically ask for a referral to a specialist who can do a functional capacity evaluation or a formal assessment of your limitations. GPs sometimes hesitate to take the lead on this stuff but they're much more likely to act on a specialist's recommendation. Also, if your insurer has a third-party case manager assigned to you, know that their job is to manage costs, not advocate for your recovery — you are allowed to have your own treatment team making decisions independently of them.

    • 9
      quiet-rider384

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 15
    plain-owl-540

    Stop letting your employer's accommodation complaints become your problem to fix. That's an HR and legal issue for them, not a reason for you to keep pushing through an injury. You have rights under disability accommodation law and your employer threatening to end WFH before your medical situation is resolved could actually create exposure for them. Get the documentation from your doctor even if you have to be very blunt about needing it, and talk to someone who knows employment law — even just once — before you let work pressure dictate your medical decisions.

    • 6
      calm-driver686

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 18
    warm-tern-122

    I just want to say — the fact that you've kept showing up at this job, in this much pain, while dealing with all of this in the background? That's not a small thing. You've been incredibly strong and I think you've been so focused on surviving that you maybe haven't let yourself fully register how much this crash took from you. Please be kind to yourself while you figure out the next steps. You deserve actual support, not just to be managed and minimized.

  • 8
    warm-dove-746

    Quick question — have you actually gotten a formal diagnosis for the nervous system stuff, like from a neurologist or someone who specializes in post-traumatic pain? I ask because 'my nervous system is off' means something very specific medically and it carries a lot more weight in a claim when it's been formally assessed vs. described in general terms. What does your actual documented diagnosis say right now?