The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
Medical & injuriesbrave-kestrel-230

Anyone else feel "invisible" because your worst injuries don't show on the outside?

I know this might sound weird but sometimes I genuinely wish I had a cast or a visible scar on my face — something people could see — because what's actually wrong with me is all on the inside and it makes everything so much harder to navigate socially.

My accident was earlier this year. From the outside I look completely normal. No limping, no bandages, nothing. But I have a brain injury that wrecked my short-term memory, I lose words mid-sentence constantly, I get overwhelmed by noise and crowds really fast, and my emotions can go sideways without much warning. I also get crushing fatigue — not like "I'm tired" fatigue, like wall of concrete falls on you fatigue — from things that used to be nothing. A 45-minute phone call can wreck my whole afternoon.

The problem is that because I look fine, people just... assume I am. Coworkers joke about me "spacing out." A family member recently suggested I just need to "push through it more." And honestly the worst part isn't even what they say — it's that I don't always want to explain myself. It feels like either I stay quiet and seem rude or lazy, or I tell my whole trauma story to someone who didn't ask for it.

Had a moment at a coffee shop last week where I completely blanked on how to say a word I use every day and the barista gave me this look like I was being difficult. I almost cried in line.

Does anyone else deal with this "invisible injury" thing? How do you handle it without constantly having to justify your whole existence to people?

16replies

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16 replies

  • 22
    swift-mole-560

    Oh my god, yes. I had a concussion after my accident that turned into post-concussion syndrome and I looked totally fine within two weeks. But I was a mess internally for almost a year. The "you look great!" comments were somehow the most demoralizing thing people could say to me. Like, cool, my hair looks nice, but I just drove past my own house twice because I couldn't remember where I lived. You're not alone in this at all.

    • 1
      quiet-walker251

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

  • 12
    clever-beaver-273

    Brain injuries are genuinely some of the most under-appreciated injuries out there from a social standpoint. The symptoms you're describing — word-finding difficulty, emotional dysregulation, fatigue, memory gaps — are completely real and documented consequences of TBI, and they don't follow a tidy timeline. The frustrating thing is that the brain doesn't show up on your face.

    One thing that helped some of my patients was having a short, rehearsed script — not a full explanation, just something like "I'm recovering from a brain injury, I might need a moment." It doesn't owe anyone details and it puts the awkwardness back on them if they react poorly. You shouldn't have to use it, but sometimes having it ready takes some of the pressure off.

    • 2
      hopeful-survivor801

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 13
    mellow-wren-959

    The barista story made my chest hurt. I'm so sorry. You shouldn't have to justify yourself to anyone, especially not a stranger in a coffee line. Please be gentle with yourself — what you're dealing with sounds genuinely exhausting in a way most people will never understand.

    • 3
      hopeful-traveler661

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

    • 6
      plainspoken-overpass404

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 11
    steady-wren-911

    I want to gently flag something here — if you're in any kind of claim or legal process around this accident, be careful about how much you post publicly even anonymously, but also DOCUMENT everything you just described. Insurers love invisible injuries because they're easier to dismiss or lowball. Keep a daily symptom journal if you aren't already. The "you look fine" logic isn't just a social problem, adjusters use it too.

    • 1
      restless-co-pilot298

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

  • 19
    plain-badger-859

    Honest truth from someone who used to work the other side of this: TBI claims are ones that adjusters are trained to be skeptical of because the injuries don't show up cleanly on imaging a lot of the time. That doesn't mean they aren't real — it just means the system is not set up to easily recognize them. Make sure you have a neurologist or neuropsychologist documenting your deficits formally. A neuropsych evaluation that actually names the functional impairments is way harder for an insurance company to hand-wave away than a general "head injury" notation.

  • 12
    steady-dove-557

    Not legal advice, but what you're describing — cognitive deficits, emotional dysregulation, fatigue affecting daily function — can constitute very significant damages in a personal injury case, including things like loss of enjoyment of life and impacts on your ability to work. The challenge is building the record to support it. A neuropsychologist evaluation and consistent treatment notes are your foundation. Just something to keep in mind if you haven't already talked to someone about your options.

  • 11
    gentle-stoat-402

    You don't owe anyone an explanation. Full stop. The people who matter will figure it out or ask respectfully. The barista doesn't matter. The coworkers who don't get it don't matter. I know that's easier said than felt, but you're spending a lot of energy managing other people's perceptions when that energy is already limited for you. Protect it.

  • 10
    cool-lynx-713

    I hear how hard this is, and I'm not going to pretend it isn't. But I do want to say — the fact that you noticed the word-finding moment, that you understood what was happening to you, that you're self-aware enough to articulate all of this? That's your brain working. Injured and working hard. That's not nothing. Recovery from TBI is slow and nonlinear but people do get meaningfully better. I really hope you're getting good support from a specialist who actually knows this stuff.

    • 10
      steady-parent376

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

  • 13
    genuine-raven-840

    Are you working with a neurologist or a TBI specialist right now, or mostly on your own? I ask because some of what you're describing — especially the fatigue and emotional stuff — can also overlap with other things like anxiety or sleep disruption after trauma, and teasing apart what's what actually matters for treatment. Not doubting you at all, just wondering if you've had a full workup.

    • 7
      patient-dreamer832

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