The Shoulder
The Shoulder
56
Car accidentsbright-stoat-008

I caused the accident and I can't stop replaying it in my head every single day

I don't really know how to start this so I'm just going to say it. A few months ago I ran a stop sign — I was exhausted coming off a double shift and misjudged the intersection — and I hit another car on their passenger side. The sound is something I genuinely cannot describe. My whole windshield went white from the dust and I just sat there completely frozen.

The other driver was taken away by ambulance. I kept asking the cop on scene if she was okay and he wouldn't tell me anything. I found out later she broke her arm and had some rib injuries. She's recovering, from what I understand. I feel sick about it constantly.

I was cited. I have a clean record otherwise. I'm 22. I've been driving since I was 16 and never had so much as a fender bender.

Here's the thing — I can function, but barely. I wake up at like 3am sometimes and I'm back at that intersection. I got back in my car once to drive to the grocery store and made it exactly two blocks before I had to pull over and just sit there. I went back to work but I'm zoning out constantly. My coworkers have noticed.

I don't know what this forum is really for but I needed to tell people who might actually get it. Has anyone dealt with the guilt when it was your fault? Not just the fear of driving again but the guilt part? Does it ever get better or am I going to feel like this forever?

10replies

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10 replies

  • 10
    kind-badger-218

    I wasn't the one at fault in my accident but I still went through almost exactly what you're describing — the 3am wakeups, zoning out, not being able to get back in a car. Trauma doesn't care who caused it. Your nervous system got absolutely rattled and it's responding the way nervous systems do. Please don't beat yourself up for struggling. That part takes time and it does get better, but you might need some help getting there.

    • 13
      humble-kestrel-382

      Okay, two separate tracks here and you need to handle both. One: get yourself into therapy, specifically someone who does trauma work. The other stuff — the citation, insurance, any potential civil claim — is a separate problem. Don't let the legal anxiety bleed into your mental health recovery or vice versa. Deal with each one deliberately.

  • 15
    spry-mole-057

    What you're describing — the intrusive replaying, sleep disruption, hypervigilance around driving, the zoning out — those are really classic signs of acute stress response, possibly sliding into PTSD territory. That's not me diagnosing you, just saying this is a real and recognized thing that happens after traumatic events, especially when you feel responsible. Please look into talking to someone, whether that's a therapist or even your regular doctor as a starting point. This isn't something you should just wait out.

    • 8
      calm-passenger335

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 17
    calm-crow-815

    I just want to say you sound like a genuinely good person. The fact that you were sitting there worried about the other driver instead of yourself says a lot. You made a terrible mistake but you're not a terrible person. I really hope you find some support — you deserve it too.

    • 9
      wise-fox-455

      On the practical side, if you haven't already looped in your auto insurance carrier, do that immediately if you haven't. You were cited, which means there's likely going to be a claim filed against your policy by the other driver. Don't talk to anyone else about the details of what happened — not on social media, not casually. Your insurer will assign someone to handle the claim. Just making sure you know that part of the process is probably already in motion whether you've engaged with it or not.

  • 11
    bright-finch-342

    One thing to watch for — even as the at-fault driver you still have rights and your own insurance is supposed to be working for you up to your policy limits. If adjusters or anyone else start pressuring you to give recorded statements without understanding what you're agreeing to, slow down. You can ask questions. You can ask for things in writing.

  • 13
    candid-hare-457

    You reached out. You're not bottling this up alone. That's genuinely the first step and it matters. A lot of people in your position just shut down completely. The guilt means you have empathy — that's not a flaw, it's just overwhelming you right now. It won't always be this heavy.

    • 1
      gentle-passenger789

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

  • 8
    quiet-crane-662

    Not trying to pile on but I'm curious — have you actually talked to anyone in person about this yet, like a doctor or a counselor? Because I want to make sure you're getting real support and not just processing it in online forums. Both can coexist but the online piece shouldn't be the only outlet.