The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
clever-crane-652

Barely any damage to my truck but I can barely turn my neck — is this normal??

So this happened about a week ago and I'm still kind of processing it. I was sitting at a red light, completely stopped, when someone plowed into the back of me. The impact wasn't insane — my truck has maybe a scuff and a tiny crease on the bumper. The other driver's insurance is already trying to tell me the damage is "minor" like that somehow means I should be fine.

Here's the thing though: I am absolutely not fine.

My neck has been stiff and achy since basically the next morning. Turning my head to check blind spots while driving is genuinely painful. I also keep getting these weird headaches that start at the base of my skull and creep upward. And last night I woke up at like 2am because my upper back was in full spasm. That was fun.

I've never been in an accident before so I genuinely don't know if this is just how it goes. Is it normal for your body to feel way worse than your vehicle looks? I feel like people are going to think I'm exaggerating because the bumper isn't caved in or whatever.

Also — should I be seeing a doctor even if I think it might "work itself out"? I haven't gone yet because honestly I wasn't sure it was worth the hassle. Now I'm second-guessing that decision.

Any insight from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now. Feeling kind of alone in this.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 17
    calm-crane-919

    Oh my gosh yes, this is SO normal and I wish someone had told me that sooner. I got hit from behind a couple years ago and my car looked almost perfect. I thought I was being dramatic. Turns out I had soft tissue damage in my neck that took months of physical therapy to get under control. The vehicle crumple absorbs energy — your body absorbs the rest. Please don't wait on the doctor visit.

    • 1
      weary-commuter579

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 20
    mellow-crow-131

    What you're describing — neck stiffness, headaches starting at the base of the skull, muscle spasms — is a really classic presentation of whiplash-type injury. The delayed onset (feeling worse the day after) happens because inflammation builds up over the first 24-48 hours. Vehicle damage and body damage genuinely are not correlated the way people think. A stiff, heavy bumper can look fine while transferring a ton of force straight into the occupant. Please get evaluated. Imaging might be warranted depending on what the doctor finds, and you want that documented sooner rather than later.

    • 11
      curious-tern-251

      The fact that their insurance is already flagging the damage as "minor" is a red flag to me. They're laying groundwork to minimize your injury claim. Don't talk to their adjuster without getting your own medical documentation first. Every conversation you have with them right now can be used against you later.

  • 20
    keen-kestrel-432

    I used to work for an insurance company and I'll be honest — "low damage = low injury" is a talking point adjusters are literally trained to use. It sounds logical so most people just accept it. The biomechanics don't actually work that way though. I saw plenty of claims where the car had minor cosmetic damage and the person had legitimate cervical injuries. Go to the doctor, get everything documented, and stop chatting with their adjuster informally.

    • 5
      curious-parent215

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 20
    brave-wolf-344

    Go to the doctor today. Not tomorrow, today. Every day you wait without a medical record is a day the insurance company will point to and say "well they must not have been that hurt." You can sort out whether it's serious later — right now you just need it on paper.

    • 9
      curious-passenger768

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 17
    quick-crane-580

    From a documentation standpoint, the timeline really matters here. You want medical visits that start close to the date of the accident. Gaps in treatment or a delayed first visit get used to argue that your injuries weren't caused by the crash. I'd also suggest keeping a short daily journal — just a few sentences about your pain level, what activities you couldn't do, how you slept. It sounds tedious but it becomes really useful evidence if this turns into a claim dispute.

    • 8
      restless-road-soul235

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

  • 13
    warm-badger-451

    Please don't tough this out. I know it feels weird going to a doctor when your truck looks okay, but those headaches creeping up from your neck honestly sound like something worth getting checked. You're not being dramatic. You got hit by a car!

    • 6
      calm-parent529

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 16
    calm-lynx-895

    The good news is you caught this early enough that if you get into treatment now — whether that's a doctor, chiropractor, or PT — a lot of people recover really well from this kind of thing. The folks who struggle most are usually the ones who waited and let it become a chronic problem. You're already asking the right questions.