The Shoulder
The Shoulder
73
daring-owl-361

Black ice sent us rolling on the highway — everyone survived but I'm still shaking

I don't even know where to start with this. Three days ago I was driving my SUV on the interstate with my elderly father in the passenger seat and my cat in her carrier in the back. We do this trip together maybe once a month — totally routine, I've driven that stretch a hundred times.

Conditions looked completely fine. No ice warnings on my navigation app, pavement looked totally clear and dry. I was actually doing a few mph under the posted limit because my dad gets anxious on highways.

Then out of absolutely nowhere the rear of the vehicle just let go. I've heard people talk about black ice your whole life but nothing prepares you for how fast it happens. I tried to correct — I don't even know if I did the right thing — and the car swapped ends. We hit the embankment on the shoulder and I remember the world just... rotating. We rolled at least once, maybe twice. Ended up on the passenger side in a shallow drainage ditch.

Here's the part I keep replaying: my cat's carrier door popped open on impact. I was convinced she was gone. But after maybe 45 minutes trapped in the car waiting for highway patrol, she was found hiding under the crumpled dash on the back seat side. Completely fine.

My dad has a badly bruised shoulder and some lacerations. I have whiplash and a cracked rib they found on imaging. But we're alive, and that still doesn't feel real.

Now I'm staring at a stack of paperwork — the other driver's insurance (yes, somehow another car was involved before the spin), my own carrier, a rental situation, and medical bills already starting to arrive. I don't know where to even begin. Has anyone been through something like this? How do you handle the aftermath when you're still in shock?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 7
    humble-fox-618

    Oh my gosh, I got chills reading this. I rolled my car on a wet off-ramp two years ago and that disorientation — not knowing which way is up while it's happening — stayed with me for months. The fact that your cat survived hiding under the seat is honestly miraculous. Give yourself serious permission to just breathe for a few days before you try to tackle the paperwork mountain. It will still be there.

    • 6
      tired-parent906

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 14
    patient-hare-978

    Please don't underestimate that cracked rib. I know it sounds minor compared to everything else but rib injuries can complicate breathing if you push yourself too hard too fast — people sometimes develop secondary issues because they try to tough it out. Follow up with your doctor even if you start feeling better, and if you ever feel short of breath or chest tightness beyond normal soreness, don't wait around. Also keep a log of every symptom, even the small weird ones. That documentation matters more than people realize.

    • 14
      daring-seal-332

      I just want to say — a cracked rib, whiplash, your dad hurt, trapped in a ditch, and you're worried about paperwork three days later?? Please let someone take care of you for a minute. Is there family or a friend who can help sort through the insurance stuff so you don't have to carry all of it alone right now?

    • 5
      hopeful-dreamer781

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 13
    humble-otter-407

    The moment the other carrier contacts you, be very careful. They're going to sound sympathetic and helpful and they will absolutely use anything you say to minimize what they pay out. Don't give a recorded statement without understanding what you're agreeing to first. 'I'm still being evaluated by doctors' is a completely acceptable response to almost every question they ask right now.

  • 11
    wise-grouse-455

    I used to work claims and I want to reinforce what the person above said. When you're still in shock and grateful to be alive, it's really easy to say things like 'I'm doing okay' or 'it wasn't that bad' — and those phrases get noted. I've seen files where OP's own early recorded statements were used to argue their injuries were minor. Your current emotional state is not an accurate measurement of your physical or psychological injuries. Take your time.

    • 21
      clear-kestrel-967

      A couple of practical things worth knowing: document everything with photos now if you haven't — the vehicle damage, your visible injuries, the road conditions if you can get back there or find any traffic cam footage. Also, if another vehicle was involved, their insurer and your own insurer may end up with competing interests depending on how liability shakes out. That's part of why talking to a PI attorney early — even just a free consult — can help you understand whose version of events is being built behind the scenes. Not pushing anything, just saying the paperwork isn't neutral.

    • 4
      weary-commuter679

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 6
    keen-marten-404

    I know this probably sounds hollow right now but: your dad is here, your cat is here, you are here. A cracked rib heals. I don't say that to minimize the trauma — what you went through was terrifying and the aftermath is genuinely stressful — but sometimes it helps me to just anchor back to 'we made it out.' You've got time to deal with the rest.

    • 0
      kind-traveler460

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 11
    careful-seal-355

    Okay practical steps: (1) stop talking to any insurance company until you know exactly what you're agreeing to, (2) keep every single medical record and receipt, (3) write down your account of the accident while it's still fresh — what the road looked like, your speed, what happened in sequence — because your memory will get fuzzy faster than you think, and (4) get a free consult with a PI lawyer before you sign anything. You don't have to hire anyone, but you should know your options.

    • 8
      weary-wanderer338

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 17
    humble-grouse-590

    When you say another car was involved — what exactly happened there? Did they hit you first, or did their presence cause you to react and then the ice took over? That detail matters a lot for how liability gets divided. I'm not doubting you at all, just thinking out loud that the sequence of events is going to be the core of any claim here.