The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
Car accidentshumble-finch-316

Can't stop white-knuckling the steering wheel since my crash — how do you get past the fear?

I don't even know how to start this but I need to talk to people who get it.

About three weeks ago I got hit hard at an intersection — the other driver blew through a stop sign and slammed into my side of the car. Airbags went off, windows shattered, the whole thing. I wasn't trapped but I genuinely thought in that moment that I was going to die. My daughter was in the backseat. She wasn't hurt, thank God, but I keep replaying it over and over.

Physically I'm dealing with a cervical strain and some soft tissue stuff in my hip. I'm doing PT twice a week. But honestly the mental part is what's wrecking me right now.

I am terrified to drive. Like, palms sweating, heart pounding before I even turn the key. I'm a single parent with two kids in different schools across town. I have no choice but to drive every single day — school runs, my own PT appointments, groceries, everything. Yesterday I had to pull over on the way to pick up my son because I was shaking so badly I couldn't focus.

I cried in my car in a parking lot for 20 minutes before I could get back on the road.

I don't have a therapist yet — I'm on a waiting list — and I'm struggling to find coping strategies in the meantime. Has anyone else dealt with this level of driving anxiety after a crash? What actually helped you? Did it get better on its own over time, or did you need professional help specifically for the trauma side?

I feel like nobody around me understands why I'm not just... over it already.

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 22
    bold-badger-226

    If you've already been in contact with the other driver's insurance, be really careful about how much you share with them. Adjusters are trained to pick up on things that minimize your claim — including mental health stuff. I've seen people casually mention 'I'm doing better' on a recorded call and have it used against their anxiety claim later. Keep those conversations short and factual until you have representation.

    • 5
      weathered-backseat448

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 17
    sharp-crow-789

    Two practical things: 1) Look up 'driving anxiety exposure therapy' on YouTube — there are actual therapist-guided videos that walk you through graded exposure techniques you can use on your own while you wait for a therapist. 2) Call your doctor and be blunt about the severity of what you're experiencing. They can sometimes fast-track a mental health referral or at least document everything. Don't sit on a waiting list quietly — advocate for yourself.

    • 5
      grounded-mile-marker645

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

  • 14
    swift-vole-692

    I could have written this post myself six months ago. I was T-boned too and the driving anxiety was absolutely debilitating for weeks. What helped me more than anything was just forcing myself to do short, low-stakes drives first — like, literally around the block — until my nervous system stopped treating every trip like a life-or-death event. It felt stupid but it genuinely worked over time. You're not broken, you just went through something traumatic.

    • 13
      kind-beaver-383

      What you're describing sounds a lot like acute stress response, which can slide into PTSD if it goes unaddressed. The physical symptoms you're having while driving — shaking, racing heart, difficulty focusing — those are real neurological responses, not just 'being anxious.' Please push hard to get off that therapy waiting list or look for a telehealth option specifically for trauma. EMDR has really solid evidence for accident-related PTSD and a lot of practitioners offer it virtually now. You deserve support for the mental injury just as much as the physical one.

  • 13
    clever-otter-701

    The part about crying alone in a parking lot for 20 minutes just broke my heart. You're carrying so much and doing it solo with two kids depending on you. Please don't dismiss what you're feeling as weakness — you watched your car get destroyed with your child inside. Of course your brain is scared. Sending you so much strength.

    • 15
      careful-elk-865

      Not legal advice, but I'd really encourage you to document what you're experiencing — the anxiety, the driving difficulty, the impact on your daily routine with your kids. Courts and insurers recognize psychological injury as real harm, and things like having to pull over because you're shaking have actual value in a claim. If you haven't spoken to a PI attorney yet, most do free consultations and this is worth at least a conversation.

    • 4
      gentle-traveler656

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 11
    warm-sparrow-778

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that you're still getting in the car every day even though it terrifies you? That's genuinely brave. You're not letting the fear win, even when it's hard. That resilience matters.

  • 9
    silent-lynx-844

    Genuine question — is there any chance some of the physical symptoms (heart racing, shaking, trouble focusing) could also be connected to the cervical injury or even lingering concussion effects? I only ask because I had a friend who thought her post-crash anxiety was purely psychological and it turned out there was an inner ear component making her feel off-balance in the car. Worth mentioning all of it to your doctor if you haven't already.

    • 1
      calm-optimist820

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.