The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsswift-badger-544

Anyone else get triggered by sounds/smells after their crash? Thought I was losing it

So I got into a pretty bad rear-end collision about two months ago. Physically I came out of it relatively okay — some whiplash, a bruised sternum from the seatbelt locking up, and a small laceration on my hand from grabbing the steering wheel so hard. Nothing that landed me in the hospital overnight.

But ever since then I've been having these weird... episodes? Like last week I was at a gas station and caught a whiff of something burning — probably just someone's overheated brakes nearby — and I completely froze. Heart going crazy, hands shaking, the whole crash just played back in my head like a movie I couldn't turn off. It lasted maybe 90 seconds but felt like forever.

It also happens when I hear a loud bang or even a car backfiring. I flinch so hard people around me think something's wrong with me. Driving on the highway is genuinely scary now and I used to drive for a living (delivery gig, nothing commercial).

I haven't told my doctor because honestly I felt embarrassed — like, I didn't even get seriously hurt, so what right do I have to be freaked out? But it keeps happening and it's starting to mess with my ability to work and just... function normally.

Has anyone else gone through something like this after a crash? Is this just stress or is there a name for it? Did it go away on its own or did you have to actually do something about it? Any input helps, I feel kind of alone in this.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 7
    brave-elk-638

    You are absolutely not alone. After my crash last year I couldn't even sit in the passenger seat without gripping the door handle the whole time. The smell of burnt rubber would send me straight back to the moment of impact. It took a few months and honestly some therapy before I started feeling like myself behind the wheel again. What you're describing sounds like a really normal response to a really abnormal event — your brain is just trying to protect you, even if it's overdoing it.

    • 7
      honest-commuter501

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

  • 13
    clear-badger-818

    Please don't minimize this because your physical injuries weren't severe. What you're describing — the intrusive replaying, the physical shaking, being triggered by sensory stuff like smells and sounds — those are textbook trauma responses. The body keeps score whether we want it to or not. I'd genuinely encourage you to bring this up with a doctor or even a therapist who does EMDR or trauma-focused CBT. It's very treatable, but it tends not to just vanish on its own without some support.

    • 8
      calm-driver761

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 10
    sharp-finch-066

    Oh man, please don't feel embarrassed about this. Trauma doesn't have a 'severity requirement.' You went through something terrifying and your nervous system is still in fight-or-flight mode. That's not weakness, that's just being human. I really hope you talk to someone — even a crisis text line could be a good first step if you're not ready for a full appointment yet.

  • 20
    quick-newt-010

    Just flagging something from a legal standpoint (not legal advice): what you're experiencing could actually be documented as part of your injury claim if you haven't closed anything out with insurance yet. Psychological trauma — including PTSD symptoms — is a recognized category of damages in personal injury cases. Getting evaluated by a mental health professional creates a record. Don't sign any settlement releases until you have a clear picture of all your symptoms, physical and mental.

    • 4
      soft-spoken-offramp778

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 8
    quiet-swan-884

    Be really careful if an adjuster calls and asks how you're 'doing.' They are trained to get you to say you're fine. You are NOT fine, and what you're going through is real and compensable. Don't volunteer information about your mental state to them — it can and will be used to minimize your claim.

  • 7
    clever-grouse-821

    From a documentation standpoint — start keeping a journal right now if you haven't already. Write down every episode: what triggered it, how long it lasted, how it affected your day. If this ever becomes part of a claim or lawsuit, that contemporaneous record is gold. Also, any mental health treatment you get should be tied back to the accident in your medical records. Make sure whoever you see knows this started after the crash.

  • 14
    gentle-elk-972

    I used to work on the claims side and I'll be honest — psychological injury from accidents is chronically undervalued because people don't report it. They feel exactly like you do: 'I wasn't hurt that bad, so why am I like this?' Meanwhile the claim gets settled low and the person is still struggling six months later. Get evaluated, get it documented, don't just tough through it.

    • 9
      quiet-walker967

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

  • 14
    quick-dove-808

    Two things: one, see a doctor this week and tell them exactly what you told us. Word for word if you have to. Two, do not settle anything with insurance until that's on record. Everything else can wait — those two things can't.