The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsdaring-stoat-068

Accident made my driving anxiety so much worse — anyone else struggle to get behind the wheel again?

So I've been sitting on getting my license for a while now — life kept getting in the way, you know how it goes. I'm in my late twenties and honestly embarrassed I still don't have it, but I kept telling myself next month, next month.

Then a few months ago I was a passenger when we got rear-ended at a red light. Not catastrophic or anything — the other driver wasn't paying attention and hit us hard enough to jolt everyone forward. I walked away with some neck stiffness and a referral for PT. Physically I'm mostly okay now.

But mentally? Different story.

Ever since, I white-knuckle every single car ride. I'm constantly checking mirrors that aren't even mine to check, tensing up every time someone follows too close, gasping at normal merges. My partner has started calling me the "backseat air-brake" because I keep slamming my foot into the floor. It's gotten to the point where I turned down a trip I'd been looking forward to for months just because the drive made me too anxious.

Now every time I try to imagine actually driving myself — being the one responsible — I just shut down. What if I freeze at the wrong moment? What if my reaction time isn't fast enough because I'm too busy panicking?

Has anyone else gone through this? Did you ever actually get comfortable driving again, or at least get to a manageable place? Did therapy help? I feel like people don't talk about this side of accidents enough — the invisible stuff that lingers.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 9
    steady-swan-960

    This is so real and I feel like nobody warns you about this part. After my accident I couldn't even sit in the front seat for almost two months — I kept insisting on sitting in the back like a kid. What helped me was honestly just tiny exposures. Short trips, familiar roads, low-traffic times. I didn't just "get over it" but I slowly stopped dreading it as much. Be patient with yourself.

    • 22
      wise-kestrel-545

      What you're describing — the hypervigilance, the physical tension, avoiding situations that remind you of the accident — those are really common trauma responses after a crash, even a relatively minor one. It doesn't mean something is permanently wrong with you, it means your nervous system got scared and is trying to protect you. A therapist who does EMDR or CBT specifically for accident-related anxiety can make a huge difference. Worth asking your doctor for a referral if you haven't already.

    • 3
      mellow-overpass865

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

    • 7
      curious-parent767

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 18
    plain-lynx-063

    The "backseat air-brake" thing made me laugh but also honestly my heart goes out to you. You went through something scary and your brain is just trying to keep you safe. Don't beat yourself up for not having your license yet — that's honestly the least important part of this. Taking care of how you're feeling comes first.

  • 9
    bold-beaver-002

    The fact that you want to get your license and you're not just writing it off entirely is a really good sign. A lot of people who go through this just quietly stop trying and never address why. You naming the anxiety and asking for help is genuinely the hardest step. It gets better — I promise.

  • 13
    bold-seal-558

    Get a therapist who specializes in trauma or phobias — not just a general one, specifically someone who works with accident survivors or driving anxiety. There are even driving-specific anxiety programs in some areas. Don't try to white-knuckle your way through this alone, that usually just reinforces the fear. Treat it like the real thing it is.

    • 3
      tired-rider436

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 14
    wise-crow-765

    Just curious — have you talked to any doctor or therapist about this since the accident, or have you mostly been trying to manage it on your own? I ask because sometimes what feels like pure anxiety is also tied to physical stuff like lingering neck tension or sleep disruption from the injury, and treating the body piece can actually help the mental piece too.

  • 10
    spry-hare-529

    I turned down stuff too after mine. A concert, a weekend trip, a family thing out of town. I kept making excuses that weren't the real reason. Eventually my sister called me out gently and I broke down and told her the truth. Having someone actually know what was going on helped more than I expected. You don't have to carry this quietly.

  • 18
    daring-newt-904

    Not sure if this is on your radar but psychological trauma — including driving anxiety and PTSD symptoms from an accident — can actually be part of a personal injury claim if the accident was someone else's fault. It's called "pain and suffering" and it covers emotional and mental impacts, not just the physical stuff. Just something worth knowing, especially if you're still dealing with it long-term.