The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
candid-heron-514

Almost didn't make it 8 months ago. Still processing it every single day.

I don't really know how to start this. I've been lurking here for a while and finally feel like maybe I need to just say it out loud somewhere people might actually get it.

Eight months ago I was in a rollover crash on a rural highway. I was a passenger — my coworker was driving, someone I'd known for almost three years and trusted completely. From what I was told later, a tire blew and we went off the road and rolled. I genuinely don't remember any of it. My last memory is a song playing on the radio and then nothing until I woke up eleven days later in the ICU.

The trauma team told my family I was a long shot. I had internal bleeding they couldn't get ahead of at first, multiple broken ribs, a collapsed lung, and a serious brain bleed. I was airlifted twice — once from the scene and again between hospitals. My mom says she had a conversation with a doctor where she was told to prepare herself.

I lived. I'm walking. I'm mostly functional. On paper I "recovered."

But here's the thing nobody tells you: surviving something like that doesn't feel like winning. At least not most days. I have nightmares I can't explain because I don't even have real memories of the crash. I flinch every time someone else is driving. I've cried in parking lots for no apparent reason. My friends are supportive but they look at me like I should be grateful and done with it — and I am grateful, believe me — but I'm also not okay, and I feel like I have no language for that.

Has anyone else gone through something where the physical recovery "finished" but the rest of it just... didn't? I feel kind of invisible with this.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 5
    kind-hare-158

    The part about friends expecting you to be grateful and done — I felt that so hard. After my crash people kept saying "but you're here, you're okay!" Like the finish line was just not dying. Nobody talks about what comes after that. You're not invisible, you're just in a part of the process that most people haven't seen up close.

    • 7
      hopeful-survivor424

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 18
    clear-bison-163

    What you're describing — the nightmares without actual memories, the hypervigilance in cars, the unexplained emotional responses — that's really consistent with trauma responses after a critical injury, even when someone has amnesia around the event itself. Your nervous system was there even if your conscious memory wasn't. Please don't let anyone brush this off as you being dramatic or ungrateful. A therapist who specializes in trauma (specifically somatic or EMDR approaches) can be genuinely helpful here, not just regular talk therapy. You deserve real support for this part too.

  • 6
    mellow-sparrow-451

    I don't have any wisdom here, I just want you to know I read every word and I'm really glad you're still here to write this. The way you described it — surviving but not feeling like you won — that hit me.

  • 13
    keen-crane-161

    Eight months out from something that severe and you're walking, writing clearly, and self-aware enough to name exactly what you're feeling? That's not nothing. I know it doesn't make the hard days easier but the fact that you're looking for language for your experience means you're still fighting for yourself. That matters.

  • 13
    quick-vole-049

    Not legal advice at all, but I do want to mention one practical thing since you're eight months out: if you haven't already looked into whether your psychological injuries (the nightmares, the anxiety, the ongoing emotional impact) are documented anywhere, it's worth thinking about. Emotional and psychiatric harm from a crash is absolutely part of what injury claims can cover — but documentation matters. Seeing a therapist isn't just good for you personally, it creates a record. Just something to be aware of.

    • 8
      weathered-road-soul222

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 18
    clear-wolf-528

    Also — if there's any kind of claim open or that could be opened around this crash, be really careful what you post publicly and what you say to any insurance adjuster. They will absolutely use "I'm mostly functional" type statements to argue your ongoing suffering doesn't warrant compensation. I'm not saying don't talk about it, obviously you need to. Just be mindful.

  • 7
    daring-hare-003

    You have PTSD. I'm not diagnosing you, I'm just saying what you're describing has a name and it's extremely common after near-fatal crashes — actually MORE common when there's memory loss because your brain never got to process the event the way it normally would. Find a trauma therapist. Not a general counselor. Specifically trauma. This doesn't fix itself on its own.

  • 10
    bold-kestrel-258

    I hear you and I'm not doubting any of this — but have you actually talked to a doctor about the neurological side? Brain bleeds can have long-tail effects on mood regulation and emotional processing that sometimes don't get followed up on after the acute phase. Some of what you're experiencing might have a physical component too. Are you still seeing any specialists?

    • 8
      calm-passenger663

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.