The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Car accidentsdaring-seal-174

my boyfriend is relearning to walk because of an accident & I can't stop blaming myself

I don't even know how to start this. I've been carrying this around for months and finally found this place so here goes.

Back in the spring, my boyfriend and I were coming home late from a birthday dinner. He was driving, I had a few drinks at the restaurant so he took the wheel. Somewhere on the highway, something happened — neither of us really knows exactly what. I think he may have pulled over because I wasn't feeling well. What we do know is that another driver came out of nowhere and slammed into us while we were stopped on the shoulder.

I woke up in the hospital with bruised ribs and a mild concussion. My boyfriend wasn't so lucky. He had a serious spinal injury, a shattered wrist, and trauma to one of his knees. He's had three surgeries. For a long time, he couldn't stand on his own. He's in PT now and making progress — actual real progress — but watching him work so hard just to do things he used to do without thinking... I can't describe it.

Here's the part that's eating me alive: I keep thinking that if I hadn't been drinking, he wouldn't have had to drive. If I hadn't needed to pull over, we'd have been moving. We'd have been somewhere else. He'd be fine.

I know logically that the other driver is who actually hit us. But logic isn't really winning right now.

He doesn't blame me. He's never once said anything like that. But I blame me.

I'm not sleeping. I'm barely functioning at work. I've started having really dark thoughts and honestly that scares me. Has anyone else felt this kind of guilt after an accident? How do you get through it? I'm not even sure what I'm looking for here — maybe just to feel less alone.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 20
    bold-tern-440

    Okay so separate from the emotional stuff — and please do take care of yourself first — I just want to flag that if there's an insurance claim involved here, be really careful what you say to adjusters. They will absolutely try to use any hint of "fault" language against you or your boyfriend, even in situations where a third driver clearly caused the crash. Don't give recorded statements without understanding your rights first.

  • 18
    clear-crane-000

    I know it probably doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that you're here, that you're feeling this, that you care this much — that's love. And your boyfriend is making progress. Real progress. That's not nothing. I'm not saying everything is fine, clearly it isn't, but you're both still here and that's where every good thing starts from.

  • 14
    plain-owl-625

    I felt this so deeply. After my accident — I was the one driving when we got rear-ended at a light — my passenger had a bad shoulder injury and needed surgery. Even though it was completely the other driver's fault, I spent months convinced I could have done something different. The guilt is its own kind of injury, and it's real even when it doesn't make logical sense. Please don't go through this alone. Talking to someone (I mean an actual therapist, not just venting online) genuinely helped me start to untangle it.

    • 19
      kind-fox-394

      The dark thoughts you mentioned — please take those seriously. I work in a medical setting and I see trauma responses all the time, and what you're describing (the sleeplessness, the guilt spiral, the scary thoughts) sounds like acute trauma and possibly survivor's guilt. These are real clinical things, not just "being sad." Please reach out to a crisis line or a therapist who works with trauma. The 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline is 24/7 if things get really heavy. You matter, and getting help isn't a sign you're weak — it's actually the hardest and bravest thing.

    • 5
      careful-driver123

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

    • 5
      level-offramp763

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 14
    sharp-bison-697

    Not legal advice, but: the guilt you're feeling doesn't track with how liability actually works in situations like this. A driver who hits a stationary vehicle bears an extremely high burden in any fault analysis. Please don't let your emotional experience of this accident become a legal stance you take against yourself. Talk to a PI attorney before you talk to any insurer. Many do free consultations. And seriously — please reach out to a mental health professional too. Both things matter here.

    • 4
      restless-late-shift674

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 13
    wise-wren-583

    I just want to say I'm so glad you posted this instead of keeping it inside. You've been holding something enormous completely on your own. The fact that your boyfriend doesn't blame you — that's not him being nice, that's him telling you the truth. Please be as kind to yourself as you're clearly being to him.

    • 18
      swift-grouse-735

      From a process standpoint, if you haven't already, document everything — your boyfriend's medical records, the accident report, any correspondence from the other driver's insurance. If there's a PI claim being worked, the attorney will want a complete picture of his ongoing treatment and how his quality of life has changed. That includes the emotional impact on both of you, by the way. Your suffering in this counts too, even if your physical injuries were less severe.

  • 7
    daring-tern-018

    Jumping in on what the person above said. I used to work claims and I've seen cases almost exactly like yours where the stopped vehicle's occupants get pressured into accepting partial blame just because they were parked on the shoulder. The reality is: a driver who strikes a stationary vehicle on the shoulder is almost always the at-fault party. Don't let anyone — insurance company, lawyer, anyone — make you feel like your boyfriend's situation is your legal or financial responsibility.

    • 8
      sharp-badger-750

      You need two things right now and neither of them is this forum (though I'm glad you're here): a therapist who specializes in trauma, and an attorney who can handle the insurance side so that pressure isn't sitting on you too. Both of those things exist and both of them can help. The guilt is a trauma symptom, not the truth. Treat it like one.

    • 10
      calm-commuter245

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