The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsclever-kestrel-906

At-fault fender bender is destroying my mental health and I might lose my gig work

I don't even know how to start this but I need to get it out somewhere.

About a week ago I tapped the car ahead of me at a traffic circle. I misjudged whether they were going or stopping — they stopped short, I didn't react fast enough, and I bumped their rear bumper. Barely any visible damage on their car. My front end looked worse than theirs.

But the other driver called the police anyway, and now I have a citation for inattentive driving and a court date coming up. And because I do rideshare and grocery delivery to pay my bills, I'm absolutely terrified that a moving violation is going to tank my driver rating eligibility and cut me off from the only income I've got right now.

I've been driving for almost a decade with zero moving violations. One moment of bad timing and now I feel like everything is caving in.

The anxiety since the accident has been genuinely hard to deal with. I replay it constantly — like, constantly. I get tense every time I have to merge or enter an intersection. I've been white-knuckling it just to get through my shifts. And I keep second-guessing every single thing I said to the officer at the scene, wondering if I made my situation worse.

I know objectively nobody got hurt and the damage was minor. But my brain won't let it go. The "what ifs" are eating me alive.

Has anyone been through something like this — at-fault minor accident, citation, and the whole spiral that comes with it? How did you handle the court date? Did it actually affect your ability to keep doing gig work? I'm really struggling here.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 9
    curious-marmot-516

    I went through almost the exact same spiral after a minor at-fault accident two years ago. The replaying it in your head thing is so real — I think I mentally re-drove that intersection about 500 times. What helped me was honestly just accepting that the anxiety is a normal response to a jarring event, not a sign that you're a bad driver or a bad person. It does fade. Give yourself some grace.

  • 18
    daring-bison-997

    What you're describing — the intrusive replaying, the hypervigilance behind the wheel, the difficulty concentrating at work — those are actually really common stress responses after any kind of accident, even minor ones. Your nervous system got a jolt and it's still on high alert. If it's been more than two or three weeks and it's not easing up, it might be worth talking to someone, even just a counselor. You don't have to be in a serious crash for it to mess with your head.

  • 12
    genuine-owl-488

    For the citation itself — it's worth looking into whether your state allows traffic court defendants to contest or negotiate the charge before the actual hearing date. A lot of jurisdictions let you request a mitigation hearing where you can explain the circumstances, and sometimes a clean prior record genuinely helps. I'm not saying the ticket disappears, but "inattentive driving" isn't always treated the same as reckless driving on your record. Might be worth a free consult with a traffic attorney just to understand your options before the court date.

    • 3
      calm-passenger911

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 20
    keen-badger-687

    If the other driver filed a claim, just be aware that anything you said at the scene and anything you say to their insurance adjuster can be used to shape how fault gets allocated. Don't assume the case is closed just because the physical damage was minor. Adjusters build files slowly. If you haven't already, stop talking to anyone except your own insurer.

  • 7
    clever-wren-028

    Honestly, minor rear-end accidents with minimal damage get processed and closed pretty fast on the claims side — the "severity" flags don't usually trip for low-impact stuff. The bigger headache for you sounds like the citation and the gig platform eligibility, which is a totally separate track from the insurance claim. Those platforms have their own MVR review schedules and they don't all check at the same frequency, so it might not be as immediate as you're fearing. Still worth checking each platform's policy directly.

    • 3
      steady-walker558

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

  • 8
    cool-tern-858

    Here's the practical stuff: check each gig app's moving violation policy today so you know exactly what you're dealing with, don't wait and be surprised. Look up a local traffic attorney for a free consult on the citation — even a short call can tell you if there's anything worth fighting. And seriously, the mental health spiral you're describing is its own problem worth addressing separately. You can't think clearly about any of this when your nervous system is in overdrive.

  • 14
    quick-otter-904

    One thing I'll say — the fact that you care this much, that you're losing sleep over it, kind of tells you something about the kind of driver you actually are. Careless people don't spiral like this. You made one misjudgment in years of clean driving. That context matters, and I hope you can hold onto it a little.

  • 16
    patient-swift-766

    Not dismissing the anxiety at all, but — did you actually check the gig platforms' violation policies, or are you assuming the worst? Some of them only pull MVRs once a year and some violations don't disqualify automatically, they trigger a review. I'd get the actual facts before assuming you're losing everything. The unknown is making the anxiety worse than the reality might be.