The Shoulder
The Shoulder
55
keen-elk-671

Our car went off a mountain road and I still can't process what happened

I'm writing this from a hospital bed and honestly still not sure why I'm alive.

We were driving back from a camping trip last weekend — me, my cousin, and her boyfriend. Mountain highway, winding section with those tight switchbacks. Out of nowhere there was this loud pop and the car just... stopped responding. My cousin was driving and she yanked the wheel but there was nothing she could do. We went through the guardrail and dropped down a pretty steep embankment into the treeline below.

The airbags went off but honestly the tumbling was so violent I'm not sure they helped much. The car came to rest on the driver's side against some trees — I think that's actually what stopped us from going all the way down to the creek bed.

Her boyfriend had to kick out a window to get us out. Her arm is broken in two places. I have a fractured collarbone, three cracked ribs, and some kind of soft tissue thing in my neck they're still evaluating. My cousin somehow walked away with bruises and a concussion.

State patrol says it looks like a blowout but they're still investigating. The car is totaled.

Here's where I'm completely lost — we were in my cousin's car, which was a rental. Neither of us had thought much about what that means for insurance. Her personal auto policy, the rental company's coverage, the credit card she used to book it... apparently all of these could be involved? And I'm just a passenger.

Does anyone have experience navigating something like this? I'm in so much pain and I can barely think straight and I feel like I'm about to get buried in paperwork and phone calls.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 14
    careful-dove-449

    Oh my god, first — I'm so relieved you're alive. Second, I was a passenger in a bad accident involving a rental about two years ago and the multi-policy situation is genuinely confusing but it does get sorted out. The most important thing right now is that you document EVERYTHING about your injuries. Every doctor visit, every prescription, every time you can't sleep because of pain. I wish someone had told me that in the first week because I was so foggy I let a lot slip.

    • 8
      hopeful-dreamer957

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

  • 19
    quick-hare-916

    Please please please don't let anyone downplay that neck soft tissue finding. 'Still evaluating' can mean a lot of things and those injuries have a way of becoming very serious problems weeks later when the adrenaline and initial inflammation settle down. Make sure you're following up with a specialist, not just your ER team. And cracked ribs are no joke — breathing exercises matter even when they hurt. Wishing you a real recovery, not just a 'technically discharged' one.

    • 16
      bold-tern-158

      The rental company's insurance adjuster is going to call you. Do not give them a recorded statement yet. They are not on your side — their job is to close your claim as cheaply as possible. Just be polite, say you're still being treated and can't discuss details right now. That buys you time to figure out what coverage actually applies and what your injuries actually are.

    • 2
      mellow-late-shift654

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 10
    daring-marten-018

    Okay so from the inside — rental accidents with multiple injured parties are actually a known headache for claims departments because of exactly the coverage stack you described. There's the rental company's liability policy, your cousin's personal auto policy (which may or may not extend to rentals depending on her carrier), and the credit card benefit if she has one. As a passenger you are generally in the best position legally because you're clearly not at fault. But the carriers will absolutely try to coordinate in ways that slow everything down. Don't be surprised if it feels like they're stalling — they kind of are, waiting to see how your medical situation develops.

    • 6
      bold-crane-616

      I just want to say — please let people help you right now. I know you're trying to figure out all the logistics but your body went through something traumatic and so did your mind. The paperwork will still be there in a few days. Is there someone who can sit with you or help field calls while you rest? You shouldn't be doing this alone from a hospital bed.

    • 6
      kind-neighbor574

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

  • 19
    warm-owl-396

    A few practical things that will matter later: get the state patrol incident report number as soon as it's available — you can usually request the full report within a week or two. Ask your doctors to note in your records that your injuries are accident-related (sounds obvious but sometimes it's not explicitly written and that creates headaches). Also, if the blowout investigation points to a tire defect rather than road conditions, there could be a product liability angle on top of everything else. I'm not saying that's what happened, just that it's worth preserving all physical evidence — the wrecked car, the tire if possible. Don't let the rental company quietly crush the vehicle before anything is documented.

    • 5
      tired-passenger591

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 21
    plain-dove-413

    Not legal advice, but as a passenger injured in a multi-vehicle or single-vehicle rental accident, you typically have access to multiple potential sources of recovery — and that's actually a stronger position than most people realize. The complexity you're describing (rental coverage, personal auto, credit card, possible product liability) is exactly why consultations exist. Most PI attorneys won't charge for an initial conversation. Don't rush it, but don't wait so long that you're negotiating alone while still in pain. Just something to think about when your head clears a little.

    • 7
      quiet-driver728

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.

  • 10
    bold-hare-637

    Three things: 1) Don't sign anything from any insurance company right now. 2) Get a personal injury consultation before you do. 3) Your injuries sound serious enough that a quick settlement offer — if one comes — will almost certainly be way less than your actual costs once you see how the neck thing shakes out. Fractured collarbone and cracked ribs alone can mean months of limited work. Price that in before you agree to anything.

    • 9
      tired-parent102

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?