The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Car accidentspatient-marten-262

The accident didn't just take my health — it took who I thought I was

I've been sitting on this for a while because I wasn't sure how to put it into words, and honestly I'm still not sure I can.

Before everything happened, I had this really clear sense of self. I was about two years into a career I'd worked really hard to build — community outreach stuff, coordinating programs for at-risk youth in my city. I was the person people called when they needed something done. I volunteered on weekends. I ran a half marathon the spring before the crash. I felt genuinely useful in the world.

Then a driver ran a red light and here I am.

The physical stuff is ongoing — I won't get into all of it — but the part nobody warned me about is what happens to your identity when you can't do the things that made you you. I had to step away from work because of cognitive stuff. Fatigue hits me in waves I can't predict. I tried going back twice and had to stop both times.

People in my life keep asking "so what's the plan?" like I'm just on an extended vacation. My old coworkers send me job postings. My mom keeps telling me I'll "bounce back." And maybe I will, I don't know.

But right now I'm grieving a version of myself that might be gone, and I don't really know who's supposed to replace her.

Does anyone else feel this? Like the accident stole something you can't put in a medical record or an insurance claim?

I'm 27 and I feel like I'm starting completely over. It's exhausting in a way that sleep doesn't fix.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 18
    silent-grouse-981

    I know this might be too early to hear and I get it if it lands wrong — but I've noticed that a lot of people who go through this kind of loss eventually find that the new self they build is more intentional than the old one. Not better necessarily, just... chosen more consciously. You knew who you were before because life handed you a path. Now you might actually get to decide. That's terrifying. It's also, weirdly, a kind of freedom. Just putting that out there for when you're ready for it, even if that's not today.

    • 6
      steady-driver386

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 16
    clear-seal-147

    I could have written this post myself, I swear. I was a personal trainer before my accident — like, movement was my whole thing, my job, my hobby, my social life. After my crash I couldn't even walk a full grocery store aisle without needing to sit down. The people who love you try, but they genuinely cannot grasp that this isn't about being sad or unmotivated. Something fundamental shifted. I'm about three years out now and I won't sugarcoat it — it's still hard — but I did slowly find little pieces of myself again. Not the same self. A different one. I'm not sure yet if that's okay or not, but I'm still here asking the question, and so are you.

    • 24
      genuine-dove-195

      Not legal advice, but I want to flag something practically: what you're describing — the cognitive symptoms, the failed return-to-work attempts, the loss of a career you'd invested in — that's not just a personal struggle. It's also potentially a significant component of a legal claim if you haven't resolved yours yet. Things like loss of earning capacity and what's sometimes called "loss of enjoyment of life" are real damages that can be documented. Just make sure whoever is handling your case (if anyone) knows the full picture of how this has affected your daily functioning and sense of self, not just the physical injuries.

  • 16
    quick-newt-274

    What you're describing has a name — it's called identity disruption, and it's incredibly common after traumatic injury, especially when there's any kind of cognitive or neurological component. The brain is doing a lot of work just to keep up with daily functioning, and the sense of self is genuinely metabolically expensive to maintain when you're also healing. That doesn't make it hurt less, but please know you're not being dramatic. What you're feeling is real and it's documented. If you haven't already, a neuropsychologist (not just a general therapist) might be worth asking your doctor about — they specialize in exactly this overlap between brain recovery and identity.

  • 16
    patient-otter-956

    The "bounce back" comments from people who love you are going to keep coming and they're going to keep stinging. I'd gently suggest having a short script ready — something like "I'm focused on recovery right now, I'll let you know when that changes" — and then just repeat it every time. Not because they deserve the grace but because it saves your energy, which you do not have to spare. Stop explaining yourself to people who aren't in the room with your body every day.

  • 10
    quick-stoat-515

    Please be careful about how much of this you share publicly or even with your own insurance company. I know that sounds paranoid but adjusters will look for reasons to frame cognitive and emotional symptoms as pre-existing anxiety or depression. Document everything with your doctors, keep a daily journal of how your symptoms affect your functioning, and don't let anyone minimize what you're going through as "stress" or "adjustment."

  • 7
    patient-grouse-598

    Have you been seen by a specialist specifically for the cognitive symptoms, or mostly just your primary care? I ask because there's a wide range of what "post-concussive" can mean and some of what you're describing sounds like it might warrant a more targeted workup. Not questioning your experience at all — just wondering if there are avenues medically that haven't been explored yet.

  • 4
    spry-swift-862

    I'm so sorry. I don't have any wisdom here, I just wanted you to know that what you wrote was really moving and it clearly took courage to put it out there. You still have a voice, even if it feels muffled right now. 💙