The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
Recovery & winssteady-hare-029

Almost a year out from my crash and I finally feel ready to talk about it

I'm 26 now. This past spring I was driving home from an early shift when a guy blew through a stop sign at full speed and T-boned me on the driver's side. Didn't even brake. I remember the sound more than anything — then nothing until I was in the ER.

Turns out I had a shattered collarbone, two broken ribs, and a pretty serious spinal compression fracture that required surgery. I spent close to two weeks in the hospital, then got shuffled to a rehab facility, then to my parents' place because I literally couldn't care for myself. My own apartment sat empty for almost three months.

The physical stuff has been brutal but honestly the emotional side caught me completely off guard. I cried in a grocery store parking lot last month because I couldn't lift a case of water. I used to coach youth soccer on weekends. I haven't been back on a field since the crash.

I'm not looking for legal advice or anything like that — I have people helping me with that side of things. I just wanted to be somewhere that people get it. My friends are supportive but there's this look they give me, like they don't know what to say, and it makes me feel more alone than if they'd said nothing.

If you've been through something like this I'd just love to hear how you got through the hard days. The ones where you're not in acute pain anymore but you're also not yourself yet. That in-between place is really tough.

Thanks for reading. Hope everyone here is healing — whatever that looks like for you. 🤙

10replies

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10 replies

  • 20
    wise-heron-565

    That in-between place you described — I called it 'the gray zone' when I was going through it. Not broken enough to be in crisis, not healed enough to feel normal. I was about 8 months post-crash when it hit me hardest, weirdly. Like my body had stabilized but my brain finally had space to process everything and it just... unloaded. You're not alone in feeling this way. It does shift, slowly. Hang in there.

  • 21
    mellow-dove-832

    What you're describing with the emotional crash after the physical acute phase — that's incredibly common and not talked about enough. The nervous system stays in high alert for a long time after trauma, and when the immediate crisis settles down the psychological weight often surfaces. If you're not already, please consider talking to someone who specializes in trauma, not just general therapy. It made a real difference for patients I've seen go through serious accidents. You're not being dramatic. This is real recovery.

  • 14
    sharp-stoat-155

    I'm not going through anything like this but I just want to say — thank you for sharing. That took guts. The part about your friends giving you that look really got me. I wonder sometimes if I do that to people I love who are struggling. I hope you find the community here that you're looking for. 💙

    • 13
      genuine-crow-977

      How long ago was the surgery exactly, and are you in any kind of formal PT program still? Asking because 'almost a year' can mean really different things depending on the injury and whether rehab was consistent. Not doubting your experience at all — just wondering if some of what you're feeling might still be addressable with the right physical support, not just emotional.

  • 10
    quick-sparrow-214

    The fact that you're writing this, reflecting on it, looking for connection — that's not nothing. That's actually a big deal. A lot of people shut down completely after trauma like this. The grief you're feeling over soccer and your independence is real grief. Naming it is part of getting through it.

  • 9
    clear-grouse-087

    Three things that actually helped me after my crash: (1) stopped pretending I was fine around people who couldn't handle the real answer, (2) found ONE thing I could still do physically and did it every single day even when it felt pointless, (3) gave myself a hard deadline to stop Googling my injuries at night. None of it fixed anything but all of it helped. You'll find your version of that.

  • 19
    silent-marmot-992

    Since you mentioned you have people helping with the legal/claims side — just make sure they know about the emotional and psychological impact too, not just the physical injuries. Things like loss of enjoyment of life, inability to do activities you did before, that stuff matters and adjusters will absolutely try to minimize it if it's not well-documented. Therapy records, notes from your doctor about mental health — keep all of it.

    • 5
      honest-walker493

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 10
    gentle-owl-762

    Not legal advice, but — what you described about losing your ability to coach and do the physical things that were part of your identity? That has real weight beyond just medical bills. Make sure whoever is helping you on the legal side understands the full picture of how your life has changed, not just the surgical stuff. Those quality-of-life losses matter. Keep journaling if you can.

    • 0
      weathered-offramp398

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