The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsgentle-crow-281

I caused a crash that hurt someone and I can't stop shaking — will I lose everything?

I don't even know how to start this. Two weeks ago I was driving on the interstate during rush hour and traffic ahead of me just stopped out of nowhere. I mean stopped — no brake lights warning, nothing. I swerved to avoid the car in front of me and clipped another vehicle in the next lane pretty hard. Turns out some people had pulled over because of a tire blowout and a couple of them were standing in the travel lane waving cars down. No cones, no hazards visible until it was way too late.

The person in the car I hit got taken away by ambulance. My insurance has since told me the injuries are "serious." I don't know more than that and honestly I'm scared to ask.

I'm 22. I work part time. I have maybe $400 in savings. I'm on my dad's insurance and he's the registered owner of the car. I haven't slept more than three hours a night since it happened. I keep running the scenario on a loop — what if I'd left five minutes later, what if I'd been in a different lane, what if I'd reacted faster.

I feel sick with guilt even though I genuinely don't think I could've avoided it. The thing I keep fixating on is the financial side — can they sue me personally even though I own nothing? Does my dad's policy cover me? What happens if the claim exceeds the policy limits?

Has anyone been on this side of an accident before? I feel completely alone right now.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    wise-beaver-831

    I was the at-fault driver in an accident a few years back that injured someone, and I want you to know the guilt spiral you're describing is so real and so exhausting. I barely functioned for weeks. What helped me was finally talking to an attorney — not because I was being sued yet, but just to understand what my actual exposure was. Knowing the real picture was way less scary than the worst-case scenarios my brain kept inventing at 3am.

  • 19
    wise-mole-000

    Can I just say — please pay attention to your own mental health right now. The guilt and the intrusive replaying of the event can turn into something clinical really fast, especially with the sleep deprivation you mentioned. That's not dramatic, that's just how trauma works on the nervous system. Even one session with a counselor or therapist can help interrupt that loop. You matter in this too.

    • 4
      curious-parent406

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 13
    quiet-owl-141

    Worked claims for years. The scary truth is that "serious injury" language in an early adjuster call is sometimes just how we're trained to flag files — it doesn't always mean what you think. Your dad's policy limits are what matter most here. Do you know what the liability limits are on his policy? That number is really the ceiling of what the insurance company has to pay, and after that they defend any lawsuit. You personally being 22 with no assets makes you a very unattractive target for collection even if it went to judgment.

    • 9
      tidy-marmot-567

      I'm so sorry you're going through this. You sound like a genuinely caring person and honestly the fact that you feel this much tells me you're not someone who was being reckless. Please don't carry this alone — talk to someone you trust in real life too, not just strangers online (though we're here for you).

  • 12
    silent-tern-193

    One practical thing: if you haven't already, write down everything you remember about the road conditions, visibility, where the stopped people were standing, whether there were any hazard lights or warnings — everything. Do it now while it's fresh. That record could matter a lot if liability ever gets contested, because there may be shared fault here given that people were standing in a live travel lane without proper warnings.

    • 1
      kind-traveler741

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 8
    careful-finch-474

    I don't want to pile on but I do want to ask — was your following distance tight before this happened? I'm not trying to make you feel worse, I just think being honest with yourself about that matters both for your own understanding and because the other driver's attorneys will ask the same thing. The people standing in the lane may share fault, but the full picture matters.

    • 3
      thankful-late-shift222

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 7
    silent-marten-770

    Not legal advice, but a couple things worth knowing: in most states, if you're a permissive driver on someone else's policy, that policy is the primary coverage for a liability claim. Your personal assets are generally only at risk if a judgment exceeds the policy limits — and even then, judgment collection against someone with no income or assets is often not practical. Seriously, consult an attorney just to map out your actual exposure. Many do free consultations for exactly this kind of situation.

  • 6
    humble-marmot-314

    Here's the bottom line: you can't un-do the accident, so stop spending energy on that loop. What you can control is making sure your dad calls his insurance broker today and confirms you're fully listed as a covered driver, and that he knows the exact liability limits on the policy. That's the number that defines your real-world risk. Everything else is noise until you know that.

  • 5
    wise-vole-037

    Please be really careful about how much you talk to the insurance adjuster right now — even your own. Anything you say gets documented and can be used to characterize what happened. You don't have to be uncooperative, but you also don't have to volunteer a running commentary on every decision you made in those two seconds. Keep it factual and short.