The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentstidy-marten-784

Can't stop replaying the crash in my head — is this normal after an accident?

I don't even know how to start this so I'm just going to type it out.

About three weeks ago I was driving home from work and a pickup blew through a red light and T-boned me on the passenger side. My teenage daughter was sitting right there. She walked away with a sprained wrist and some bruising. I had a concussion and two cracked ribs.

For the first week I felt almost euphoric — like, we're okay, this is fine, count your blessings. I was telling everyone the story almost cheerfully. Then something shifted. I went back to pick up some things from the impound lot and actually saw the car, and something just... broke open in me.

Now I'm having these looping mental replays of the impact. The sound of it. Seeing her in the corner of my eye. I keep thinking about the ten different ways it could have gone worse and I spiral from there. I snap at my daughter over nothing — the girl I was so relieved was alive two weeks ago — and then I hate myself for it.

I'm back to driving because I have to, but my hands are white-knuckle the whole time and I'm exhausted from being so hypervigilant.

I feel guilty even posting this because we survived and she's basically fine. But I also don't feel like myself at all. Is this just delayed shock? Does it go away on its own? Has anyone else hit that wall a week or two after the accident when the adrenaline wore off?

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7 replies

  • 18
    plain-lynx-043

    The impound lot thing — yes. Seeing the physical damage to the car after the fact hit me ten times harder than the actual crash did. I think when you're in survival mode you don't fully process it, and then something concrete like that just cracks it all open. What you're describing sounds exactly like what I went through after a bad intersection collision last year. It does get better, but it took me longer than I expected and I had to actually work at it.

  • 18
    steady-owl-372

    What you're describing — the intrusive replays, the irritability, the hypervigilance while driving, that delayed crash after the initial relief — those are really classic signs of acute stress response, and honestly they're almost universal after a traumatic event like this. Your nervous system is still in threat-detection mode even though the danger is gone.

    It can absolutely resolve on its own, especially within the first month or so. But if the flashbacks are still intense and frequent at the 4-6 week mark, please talk to someone — a therapist, your primary care doc, anyone. EMDR therapy in particular has really solid results for accident-related trauma. You're not being dramatic. Your brain went through something real.

  • 8
    curious-wolf-135

    Please don't feel guilty for posting this. Surviving something scary doesn't mean you don't get to struggle with it afterward. The fact that you're aware of how you're showing up with your daughter actually says a lot about you. Be kind to yourself right now, seriously.

    • 17
      warm-mole-962

      Talk to a therapist. I know that sounds like a generic answer but I mean it specifically — not a general counselor, look for someone who does trauma-focused work or PTSD. You don't need to be a combat veteran for this to qualify. A T-bone with your kid in the car absolutely counts. Most people wait way too long to get that support and the replays just dig deeper grooves the longer you let them run unchecked.

  • 16
    patient-fox-824

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that you're feeling all of this is actually a good sign in a weird way — you're processing it, not burying it. The people who worry me are the ones who say they're totally fine and never think about it. You're going to come out the other side of this.

    • 10
      swift-wolf-883

      Not legal advice, but — please make sure you're documenting how you're feeling and when. If you do see a therapist or tell your doctor about these symptoms, that becomes part of your medical record. Emotional distress and psychological impact from a crash are legitimate parts of a personal injury claim, and they're often undercounted because people don't mention them to their doctors. Just keep a record for yourself regardless of what you decide to do legally.

  • 16
    hearty-dove-472

    Did you get checked out for the concussion specifically? Because irritability, looping thoughts, and that kind of emotional dysregulation can also be concussion symptoms that linger, not just psychological trauma. I'd make sure someone has actually cleared you neurologically before assuming it's purely emotional. Just a thought — the two can overlap and feed each other.