The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Car accidentscool-newt-214

I caused the accident and I'm the one who got hurt bad — feeling so many things right now

First time I've ever been in an actual collision in over a decade of driving. I'm still kind of in shock writing this.

I was pulling out of a parking structure onto a busy street. There's this huge concrete pillar right at the exit that completely kills your sightline to the right. I crept forward as far as I could, thought I had a gap, and a pickup clipped my front end hard enough to spin me into a curb. The other driver walked away totally fine — genuinely relieved about that.

Me though? Banged up pretty good. Possible mild concussion (I couldn't spell my own street name at the scene, which freaked the paramedic out), bruised sternum, and something is definitely wrong with my left wrist and hip. Still waiting on imaging results.

The car is probably a total loss. I saved up for almost two years for that thing. Picked it up seven months ago. I know it's just metal and that I walked out, but it still stings in a way that's hard to explain.

What I keep thinking about is that pillar. Surely I'm not the first person to pull out of that structure without seeing cross traffic. Does liability get complicated when the road design itself is genuinely dangerous? Or am I just grasping for something because I feel guilty?

Also — and maybe this is the concussion talking — the airbags never went off at all. Is that something I should document and mention to whoever handles the claim?

Just needed to get this out. Thanks for being here, whoever's reading.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 17
    warm-wolf-170

    The guilt you feel even when the design clearly set you up to fail — I know that feeling. I pulled out of a poorly marked driveway a couple years ago and blamed myself for months before my attorney pointed out the exit had been flagged in prior complaints to the city. It doesn't erase what happened, but you might not be carrying as much fault as you think.

    • 1
      honest-survivor625

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

  • 17
    wise-mole-261

    I don't want to be harsh, but I'd want to know more before assuming the pillar is the main factor here. Was there signage at the exit? Was it a one-way street you were pulling onto? A lot of these 'dangerous design' arguments depend heavily on specifics. Not saying it's not valid, just that it's worth being honest with yourself AND an attorney about all the details before leaning on that framing.

    • 9
      curious-survivor217

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 14
    hearty-dove-954

    The airbag thing is 100% worth documenting separately. Adjusters are trained to treat vehicle damage and bodily injury as one pile, but a non-deployment during an impact that should have triggered deployment is potentially a separate product issue. Take photos of the airbag warning indicators on the dash, keep any diagnostic paperwork from the tow company or repair shop, and mention it explicitly when you talk to anyone handling the claim.

  • 13
    careful-crow-219

    Please be really careful about what you say to any adjuster right now. The concussion alone means you're not in a great headspace to be making statements about what you did or didn't see. You don't have to give a recorded statement immediately — in most states you have time. Don't let them rush you.

  • 10
    steady-sparrow-364

    Not legal advice, but the dangerous-design angle is worth raising with an attorney. There's a whole area around premises/roadway liability, and if that pillar has caused issues before, that history can matter. Document everything about that exit — photos, video if you can get it — before anything changes. Most PI attorneys do free consults and would at least tell you if it's worth exploring.

  • 9
    candid-crow-568

    Can I just flag something — 'possible mild concussion' needs to be properly followed up, not just noted and moved on from. If you had word-finding problems at the scene, please make sure you're being monitored. Symptoms can intensify 24-48 hours later. Also document every single symptom you're experiencing, even the ones that seem minor. It matters for your care AND for any claim later.

  • 8
    clear-vole-639

    Three things, in order: get the imaging done and don't downplay your symptoms to the doctor. Get photos of that parking structure exit TODAY if you haven't already. And don't sign or agree to anything from any insurance company until you know the full extent of your injuries — wrist and hip issues can take weeks to fully show up on scans.

    • 9
      quiet-survivor912

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 7
    clear-elk-051

    Two years of saving and seven months in — I'd be gutted too. You're allowed to grieve the car AND be grateful you're alive at the same time, those two feelings don't cancel each other out. Hope you have someone with you tonight, the day-after part of a concussion can be rough.