The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
Car accidentscareful-lynx-278

Almost a year later and the crash still lives in my head rent free — is this normal?

I don't even know how to start this but I need to say it somewhere people might actually get it.

The accident was almost eleven months ago. I wasn't driving — I was in the passenger seat. Physically I walked away with some bruising and a mild concussion, nothing that landed me in the hospital long-term. So on paper I'm "fine." But I am so far from fine.

Every single morning I wake up and it's the first thing that hits me. The sound of it. The way everything went sideways in like two seconds. I replay it constantly — what I could have said, what I should have grabbed, whether any version of me doing something different would have changed what happened. The guilt of being the one who came out okay physically is its own thing I don't know how to carry.

What makes it harder is that the circumstances around the crash weren't just a random accident, and I think that's part of why my brain won't let go. There was stuff going on before it that I ignored or minimized and I keep punishing myself for that.

People in my life keep saying things like "but you're okay though" or "it was almost a year ago, you have to move forward." And I love them but those words make me want to scream. I know it was a year ago. My nervous system apparently did not get that memo.

The images just pop up. In the shower, at the grocery store, mid-conversation. I'll suddenly be right back in that seat.

Has anyone else dealt with this this long after? Does it actually get better or am I just broken now?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 21
    hearty-swan-894

    What you're describing — the intrusive images, the re-experiencing, the guilt, the feeling that time hasn't passed — those are textbook signs of trauma stress responses. A lot of people assume PTSD only happens to combat veterans or people with "serious" physical injuries. That's just not true. Your nervous system doesn't grade trauma on a curve. Please look into talking to someone who specializes in trauma, specifically — not just a general therapist if you can help it. EMDR in particular has helped a lot of accident survivors I've worked with. You deserve actual support, not just people telling you to shake it off.

    • 8
      mellow-crane-262

      The fact that it's getting harder instead of easier actually sometimes means your brain is finally starting to process something it was suppressing. That's not me saying "see, it's fine" — it's really not fine and you clearly need more support than you're getting. But sometimes the wave getting bigger before it breaks is part of healing, not proof that you're stuck forever. You reached out here. That matters.

  • 18
    gentle-lynx-648

    I don't want to pry but you mentioned the circumstances weren't just a random accident. If there's any legal dimension to what happened — whether it involved another person's choices that put you in danger — have you ever talked to anyone about whether you have options there? Not trying to make this about money, genuinely asking because sometimes people don't realize that what happened to them has legal weight beyond just the property damage side of things.

  • 17
    spry-crow-928

    I just want to say I'm really glad you wrote this out. Holding all of that inside sounds exhausting. The people telling you to "get over it" — they care about you but they genuinely don't understand what this kind of experience does to a person. You're not weak for still hurting. You went through something real.

    • 8
      mellow-co-pilot363

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 15
    patient-dove-417

    Stop waiting for it to go away on its own. Eleven months of daily flashbacks is your mind telling you it needs professional help to get through this, not more time. Look up trauma-focused therapy options in your area this week — not someday, this week. You wouldn't walk on an untreated broken bone for a year. This is the same thing.

    • 5
      hopeful-neighbor621

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

  • 14
    humble-beaver-225

    You are not broken. I promise you that. I was in a bad crash two winters ago and the flashback thing lasted way longer than anyone told me it would. People kept acting like a few weeks was enough time to "process" it. It's not. Your brain went through something traumatic and it's doing exactly what traumatized brains do — it's trying to protect you by staying on alert. That doesn't have an expiration date that other people get to set for you.

  • 12
    bold-raven-219

    The guilt of being the passenger is so specific and so real and nobody talks about it. I felt the same way — like somehow I should have seen something coming, done something, said something. It took me a long time and a lot of therapy to understand that I was a passenger in every sense of the word and that's not a moral failing. Sending you a lot of solidarity right now.

  • 9
    quiet-lynx-957

    Jumping off what the person above said — emotional and psychological injuries from accidents are absolutely compensable in a lot of situations, and they're often underdocumented because people feel like they can't "prove" them or feel embarrassed bringing them up. If you've seen any mental health providers since the crash, even just once, that's documentation. If you haven't, starting now still counts. Just something to keep in mind — not legal advice, just process stuff I've picked up.

    • 7
      weathered-overpass149

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.