The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbrave-crane-263

Anyone else getting sleep paralysis and nightmares after their crash? It's been months

I don't really talk about this with people in my life because it feels embarrassing, but I can't keep it bottled up anymore.

My accident was back in the spring — rear-ended at a red light by someone going way too fast. Physically I'm mostly healing, but nobody warned me about what it does to your head.

I keep having these vivid nightmares where I'm back in the car, but somehow they're even worse than the real thing — like my brain decided the actual crash wasn't traumatic enough so it started writing horror sequels. I'll wake up at 3am completely convinced it's happening again, heart pounding, sometimes can't move for a few seconds. I looked it up and I think that last part is sleep paralysis.

Driving is also just... different now. I white-knuckle it at intersections even when I'm nowhere near where it happened. A car braking hard two lanes over will make me flinch so hard my passengers notice.

I mentioned it to my doctor at a follow-up and she kind of brushed past it to focus on my neck. I didn't push back and I wish I had.

If you've been through this — does it actually get better? Did anything help? And should I be documenting this somewhere officially? I honestly had no idea the mental side of an accident could hit this hard.

Hold the people close to you tight tonight. You just never know. 💙

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10 replies

  • 24
    silent-tern-925

    To answer your question about documenting it — yes, absolutely start now if you haven't. Write down your symptoms in a personal journal with dates. If you see a therapist or counselor, those records matter. Psychological injury is a real and compensable part of a personal injury claim, but it's a lot harder to prove if there's no paper trail. I'd also go back to your primary care doctor and be very direct this time: "I am experiencing sleep disturbances and anxiety symptoms I believe are related to my accident and I want this documented in my chart." Don't let them gloss over it.

    • 14
      steady-kestrel-046

      Be careful what you say to the other driver's insurance company about your mental state, seriously. They will use vague language you use casually against you — like if you say "I'm doing okay" on a recorded call they will absolutely treat that as you saying you're fine. Psychological suffering is real money in a claim and they know it.

    • 8
      mellow-sidewalk274

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 16
    clear-newt-454

    This is so real and I'm sorry you're going through it. After my accident last year I had nightmares for probably four months straight. The weird thing is mine were never a replay of the actual crash — they were always these strange variations of it, like my subconscious kept trying to rewrite the ending. Totally messed with me. It did slowly get better, but I had to be patient with myself in a way I wasn't used to.

    • 24
      careful-heron-002

      What you're describing — the nightmares, the hypervigilance while driving, the startle response, the sleep paralysis — those are all really common markers of acute stress response or PTSD following a traumatic event. Your brain is literally doing its threat-detection job too hard right now. Please don't feel embarrassed about it. Push back with your doctor or ask for a referral to someone who specializes in trauma. EMDR therapy in particular has a lot of solid evidence behind it for exactly this kind of thing. You deserve actual support for this, not just a brushed-past mention at a follow-up.

    • 19
      calm-heron-074

      Not legal advice, but just so you know — emotional distress, anxiety, and PTSD absolutely can be part of a personal injury claim. The key is getting it professionally diagnosed and treated, not just mentioned in passing. A lot of people focus only on the physical injuries and leave that piece on the table entirely. Worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney to understand your options.

  • 16
    quiet-bison-407

    The fact that you're naming it and reaching out is genuinely a big deal. So many people white-knuckle through this alone for years. You're already ahead of where I was when I went through something similar.

  • 14
    wise-raven-546

    I just want to say — you are NOT weak for feeling this way. A crash is a terrifying thing and your nervous system went through something it was never designed for. Please be gentle with yourself. 💙

    • 5
      tired-passenger974

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

  • 11
    bold-marten-893

    Two things: get a therapist who does trauma work, and go back to your doctor and don't leave until it's in your chart. That's it. Those are the two moves. Everything else follows from those.