The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsmellow-stoat-138

Body healed faster than my mind after my crash — anyone else stuck in replay mode?

So it's been about three weeks since a truck ran a red light and hit my driver's side door. Physically I got off relatively lucky — some bruising, a mild concussion, whiplash that's mostly faded. My car was totaled but I walked away.

Here's the thing nobody warned me about: my brain did not get the memo that it's over.

Every single night I wake up mid-dream and I'm back in that intersection. I can feel the jolt, hear the crunch of metal, smell that weird burnt chemical smell that filled my car afterward. During the day it'll just... hit me randomly. I'll be making coffee or sitting at a red light (which is a whole other thing — red lights are not chill for me right now) and suddenly I'm shaking and my heart is going nuts.

I've read that this is a normal trauma response and I keep telling myself "you're safe, it's over" but honestly that only helps a little. The physical stuff is healing but the mental loop feels like it's getting worse, not better.

Has anyone else gone through this? How long did it last for you? Did anything actually help — therapy, medication, just time?

Also slightly practical question: should I be documenting these symptoms somewhere? Like does the mental/emotional side of things matter for insurance or any kind of claim? I genuinely don't know how any of that works and right now I barely have the bandwidth to figure it out.

Any support or advice appreciated. Feeling kind of alone in this.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 22
    hearty-elk-264

    Oh man, I could have written this post word for word about six months ago. T-bone accident, I was the one who got hit, and I swear the mental aftermath was ten times harder than the physical recovery. Red lights absolutely destroyed me for months. What finally helped me was EMDR therapy — it's specifically designed for trauma and replaying events. It felt weird at first but after about 6 sessions I noticed the flashbacks were way less intense. Please look into it if you haven't. You're not broken, your nervous system just got a huge shock and it's trying to protect you.

  • 12
    daring-wolf-476

    What you're describing sounds really consistent with acute stress response, which can develop into PTSD if it goes untreated — I say that not to scare you but so you take it seriously and get support. The intrusive replays, the hypervigilance at intersections, the physical shaking — those are your nervous system stuck in fight-or-flight. Please talk to your doctor and be really specific about these symptoms. Don't just say 'I'm stressed,' describe exactly what you told us here. There are good treatments and you don't have to white-knuckle through it alone.

    • 18
      clever-hare-643

      I'm so sorry you're going through this. Three weeks is not very long at all and you should be really gentle with yourself. Is there anyone around you who can just sit with you, drive with you places, or even just be nearby while you're trying to rest? Sometimes having another person present helps quiet that alarm system a little. You went through something genuinely scary and your reaction makes complete sense. Sending you so much support. 💙

    • 0
      kind-driver644

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

  • 18
    genuine-mole-032

    To answer your practical question: yes, absolutely document everything. Start a simple notes app journal — date, what you experienced, how long it lasted, how it affected your day. Things like 'couldn't drive to work, had a panic attack at an intersection' or 'woke up at 3am, heart racing, took two hours to calm down.' Emotional distress and psychological injury are real, compensable damages in most personal injury cases. Insurance companies tend to minimize what they can't see on an X-ray, so the more you document now the better. Don't rely on memory later.

    • 15
      careful-marmot-387

      Please be careful if the other driver's insurance company calls you wanting to 'check in' or asks how you're doing. They are not your friend. Anything you say — including something like 'I'm doing a bit better' — can be used to minimize your claim, including the emotional/psychological side of it. Don't give recorded statements about your condition without understanding what you're agreeing to.

  • 5
    careful-marten-238

    The fact that you're naming what's happening and reaching out is genuinely a good sign. A lot of people push it down and it comes out sideways months later. You're already ahead of it in some ways. The brain stuff is treatable — it really is. Hang in there.

  • 18
    plain-finch-457

    Not legal advice, but just so you know — psychological injury including PTSD, anxiety disorder, and emotional distress are legitimate components of a personal injury claim. The fact that your physical injuries were 'minor' does not mean your mental health impact is irrelevant. A diagnosis from a mental health professional, combined with documented treatment, carries real weight. Worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before you settle anything with insurance.

    • 2
      level-late-shift990

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 7
    patient-crow-335

    Two things: see a therapist who does trauma work, and stop driving alone to places that trigger you until you feel more stable. I know that sounds limiting but pushing yourself into panic situations repeatedly before you have any tools just makes it worse. Get the tools first, then tackle the triggers. Also — do NOT settle with insurance while you're still in active psychological distress. You don't know yet how long this lasts or what it'll cost you.

    • 0
      patient-walker309

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.