The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Car accidentsswift-crane-917

Accident was 'resolved' on paper but I can't stop shaking every time I drive

I need to get this out somewhere because I feel like I'm going crazy.

About four months ago I was driving on the highway with my toddler in his car seat when a pickup truck ran a red light and T-boned us at full speed. We got spun into the guardrail. His airbag didn't deploy — mine did. There was so much noise and then just this horrible silence. My son was screaming, which I know now means he was okay, but in that moment I couldn't process anything.

A stranger pulled over and got my door open because I couldn't work the handle. My hands just weren't doing what I told them to. My son had a small mark from his harness straps and I had some soft tissue stuff in my neck and shoulder — nothing broken, nothing that shows on scans. The other driver was cited. Insurance closed out. Legally, it's "done."

But I am not done.

Every time I buckle my son into that car seat I run through every possible thing that could go wrong. Every merge, every yellow light, every car that comes up fast behind me — my heart just launches into my throat. I've started taking longer routes to avoid the intersection where it happened.

And the worst part is I keep replaying it and finding reasons it was my fault even though I had a green light and two witnesses confirmed it. My brain will not let me accept that I couldn't have prevented it.

Has anyone else gone through this after a crash that was "no big deal" injury-wise? I feel like I'm not allowed to be this messed up about it when we walked away.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 9
    keen-raven-384

    You are absolutely allowed to be this messed up about it. I was rear-ended on the freeway about two years ago — minor whiplash, car was fixable — and I spent six months white-knuckling every drive. The physical stuff healed way faster than the mental stuff. What you're describing sounds really similar to what I went through. It gets better but it doesn't just go away on its own.

    • 8
      weary-optimist294

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 21
    steady-stoat-600

    What you're describing — the hypervigilance, the replaying, the avoidance, the irrational self-blame — those are textbook trauma responses. Your nervous system went through something genuinely terrifying and it's doing exactly what nervous systems do: trying to protect you by staying on high alert. That doesn't mean you're broken or weak. It means you need actual support, not just time. Please look into trauma-focused therapy, specifically EMDR or CPT — both have really solid evidence behind them for exactly this kind of situation. You don't have to keep white-knuckling through this.

    • 19
      careful-raven-993

      I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest with you: adjusters are trained to close files fast, especially when the physical injuries look minor on paper. Psychological trauma doesn't show up in an ER report so it's easy to overlook — and sometimes easy to push past when someone just wants the whole thing to be over. I'm not saying you were taken advantage of, but I've seen a lot of people realize months later that they settled before they understood the full picture of what they were dealing with.

  • 18
    hearty-wolf-149

    Oh my gosh, reading this just made my chest tight. Having your kid in the car makes it so much more intense — of course you're not over it. Please don't measure how you're "supposed" to feel by what the insurance paperwork says. That's just money stuff. Your brain went through something completely different.

    • 13
      genuine-kestrel-486

      When you say the claim is "done" — did you sign an actual release of all claims, or just get a check for the vehicle and medical bills? Those are very different things. Also, did you ever see anyone beyond the ER visit, like a follow-up with your doctor about the neck and shoulder? Asking because the answers change what options you might still have.

  • 9
    patient-fox-959

    One thing I'd flag — if your claim got closed out quickly, did it include anything for emotional distress or ongoing psychological impact? A lot of people sign settlements without realizing that once you settle, you can't go back. Not trying to stress you out more, just worth knowing where you stand before too much more time passes.

  • 14
    warm-sparrow-150

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing — anxiety, avoidance behavior, intrusive replaying of the event — can absolutely be documented and considered in a personal injury claim, even when the physical injuries were minor. If your claim is already fully settled and signed off, that ship may have sailed, but if anything is still open, this matters. A PI attorney can usually tell you in a free consult whether there's anything left on the table. Either way, please get mental health support regardless of the legal side.

    • 4
      tired-neighbor929

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 11
    careful-bison-647

    Two things you need to do right now: find a therapist who specializes in trauma (not just general anxiety — specifically accident or PTSD trauma), and if your claim isn't 100% finalized with a signed release, talk to a PI lawyer this week. Both of those things matter equally here. Don't put either one off.

    • 3
      tired-passenger161

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 12
    cool-wolf-409

    Your son is okay. You got him through it. The fact that you're this shaken up is actually proof of how much you love him — your brain is working overtime trying to make sure it never happens again. That's not you failing. That's you being his parent. Now you just have to get yourself some help carrying it.