The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
Car accidentssharp-tern-489

Can't stop flinching every time I pass an accident scene — will this ever get better?

So I was rear-ended pretty badly on the highway back in the spring — nothing broken, thankfully, but my car was totaled and I was shaken up for weeks. Physically I've mostly bounced back, and I was honestly feeling pretty good about getting comfortable behind the wheel again.

But lately it feels like the universe is testing me. Three times in the past month I've driven right up on fresh accident scenes — like just happened, smoke still coming off one of them, first responders still pulling up. Flashing lights, that smell, people standing around in shock. Every single time my chest just closes up and my hands go white on the wheel.

I keep it together enough to slow down, merge over, get through the scene — but for the next hour I'm a wreck. Heart pounding, replaying my own crash, convincing myself I'm about to get hit again. It's exhausting.

I know logically that I'm not cursed and that accidents happen on highways all the time. But emotionally it doesn't feel that way. It feels like I'm being reminded over and over that the road is dangerous and I got lucky once and maybe I won't again.

I do have a therapist and she's been genuinely helpful — we've talked about the original crash a lot. But my next session isn't for another week and a half and this has happened twice since I last saw her.

Has anyone else gone through this? Like, does the visceral fear response eventually dull? Or do I need to be doing something differently in the moment? Just needed to say this out loud to people who might actually get it.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 19
    humble-bison-673

    Oh man, yes. I went through almost exactly this after my accident two years ago. For me it took a solid six or seven months before passing a crash scene didn't send me into a spiral. It does get better — I promise — but it's not linear. Some weeks were fine and then one bad scene would set me back a little. Just be patient with yourself. You're not broken, your brain is just trying to protect you.

    • 12
      kind-seal-461

      I just want to say I'm really glad you posted this. It takes guts to admit that something is still messing with you when you've been telling yourself you're fine. You're clearly doing the right things — therapy, staying on the road, not avoiding. Don't be too hard on yourself.

  • 21
    keen-swan-561

    What you're describing sounds a lot like a trauma stress response — your nervous system basically tagged 'accident scenes' as a threat after your own crash, and now it fires the alarm every time it sees the trigger. That's not weakness, that's literally just how brains work after scary events.

    One thing that can help in the moment is controlled breathing — slow exhale longer than your inhale, even just for 30 seconds after you clear the scene. It signals your body to come down. Not a cure, but it can take the edge off while you wait for your next therapy appointment.

  • 8
    humble-vole-262

    The fact that you're still driving and getting through those scenes in the moment is genuinely huge. Some people can't even get back in a car after a serious crash. Your brain is scared but your actions are brave — that counts for a lot.

    • 15
      cool-stoat-313

      And on that note — if an adjuster ever asks how you're doing, don't just say 'fine' or 'getting better.' They use that kind of language to close out claims cheaply. You don't have to dramatize anything, just be accurate. 'I'm still experiencing anxiety while driving' is honest and it matters.

  • 6
    patient-seal-041

    Not doubting your experience at all, but I'm curious — are these all on the same stretch of road? Sometimes there are specific routes that are just statistically more dangerous (merging points, bad sight lines, that kind of thing), and if so, taking an alternate route for a while isn't 'giving up,' it's just reducing unnecessary exposure while you're still healing.

    • 0
      level-overpass872

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 10
    clever-stoat-172

    Slightly different angle — if you're still in any kind of claim or settlement process from your original accident, what you're describing (anxiety, trauma response, ongoing emotional distress) can actually be documented as part of your damages. Make sure your therapist is keeping notes and that you're being honest with her about all of this, not just the original crash. Emotional and psychological impact is compensable in most states. Just something to keep in mind.

  • 19
    tidy-bison-410

    Send your therapist a message or an email today — don't wait a week and a half. Most therapists have a way to do a quick check-in between sessions, even just by message. You don't need a full appointment to say 'hey, this thing happened twice and I'm struggling.' Use the support you're already paying for.

    • 8
      careful-neighbor998

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