The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsbold-kestrel-503

Can't remember anything from the seconds before my crash — is that normal?

So I was in a pretty scary rear-end collision a few weeks ago on the highway. The other driver hit me going a decent speed and I wasn't expecting it at all.

Here's the weird part: I remember leaving my house, I remember merging onto the highway, and then the next thing I remember is the sound of crunching metal and my airbags going off. There's like a 60-second gap — maybe more — where my brain just has nothing. No visuals, no sounds, nothing. It's like someone hit the delete button on that chunk of time.

I went to urgent care the same evening and they checked me out — no skull fracture, no obvious concussion symptoms they flagged at the time. But I totally forgot to mention the memory gap because honestly I didn't even notice it until a day or two later when I was trying to piece together what happened.

Now it's bothering me. Is that kind of memory loss common after a crash even if the impact "wasn't that bad"? Should I go back and tell a doctor? I feel fine physically other than some neck soreness, but the missing chunk of memory is messing with me mentally.

Has anyone else experienced this? I don't want to be dramatic about it but it genuinely freaks me out that my brain just... blanked.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 9
    careful-seal-790

    Yes, this happened to me too. Got T-boned at an intersection and I swear the 30 seconds before impact just don't exist in my memory. My neurologist told me it's actually pretty common — the brain is under so much stress in that moment that it doesn't encode the memory properly. You're not imagining it and you're definitely not being dramatic.

  • 10
    spry-owl-977

    What you're describing sounds like it could be peri-traumatic amnesia — basically the brain's response to sudden, intense stress or a mild traumatic brain injury. It doesn't require a hard head strike to happen; the sudden deceleration alone can cause it. Please go back to your doctor and specifically describe the memory gap, when you noticed it, and the neck soreness. Those details together matter more than you might think. Don't wait on this one.

    • 9
      gentle-commuter888

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 16
    plain-wolf-463

    Oh wow, that would freak me out too. Please don't brush this off — go back to a doctor and just tell them exactly what you told us. That memory gap is worth getting on your medical record even if it turns out to be nothing serious.

  • 14
    brave-crow-423

    Not legal advice, but from what I've seen — getting that memory gap documented by a doctor ASAP is genuinely important. If you ever pursue a claim, gaps in your medical record can be used against you. An undocumented symptom is basically a symptom that didn't exist, as far as insurance is concerned. See a doctor, mention everything, and make sure it's written down.

  • 18
    swift-tern-226

    Heads up — if the other driver's insurance contacts you and asks you to describe the accident, do NOT volunteer that you have gaps in your memory before you've talked to a doctor and ideally a lawyer. Adjusters are trained to use that kind of thing to shift blame or reduce your payout. 'She doesn't even remember what happened' can get twisted fast.

    • 0
      gentle-wanderer766

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 17
    spry-newt-799

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest — a memory gap that isn't in any medical record is something we'd note as inconsistent or potentially exaggerated if it came up later in a claim. That's not fair to you, but it's the reality. Get it documented now while it's recent. A follow-up visit where you mention it gets timestamped and that protects you.

    • 2
      gentle-passenger383

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 13
    warm-heron-656

    Three things: 1) Go back to the doctor this week. 2) Write down everything you DO remember, right now, before more time passes. 3) Don't sign anything from any insurance company until you fully understand what you're giving up. That's it. Everything else can wait.

  • 9
    keen-otter-803

    Quick question — did your head actually hit anything during the crash, like the headrest, steering wheel, or window? And was the neck soreness there immediately or did it show up the next day? Trying to understand whether this might lean more toward a physical concussion situation versus a stress/shock response, because those can feel similar but matter differently medically.