The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentswarm-badger-176

I caused my own crash and I can't stop replaying it — anyone else deal with this?

This might be a weird post for this forum since most people here are dealing with someone else hitting them, but I needed somewhere to put this.

About eight months ago I was driving home on a two-lane highway after a really long shift. I wasn't drunk, wasn't texting — just exhausted and probably going faster than I should've been on a stretch of road I thought I knew. There was a patch of sand or gravel in a curve and I felt the back end step out. I overcorrected — classic panic move — and suddenly I was fully sideways across both lanes.

I remember seeing headlights coming toward me and just... bracing. The other car managed to swerve onto the shoulder and avoid me, thank god. I clipped the guardrail, bounced off, and ended up nose-down in a shallow drainage ditch. Airbags went off. I couldn't get my door open because the whole frame had crumpled on that side.

I had to kick out what was left of the passenger window to get out. A woman who'd pulled over came running over thinking she was going to find something much worse.

Physically I ended up with a cracked collarbone, some bruised ribs, and a mild concussion. Not "bad" by some standards but I was off work for six weeks and still get headaches.

The thing nobody really prepares you for is the mental part. I caused this. I know I did. And yet I still flinch every time I take a curve, still wake up hearing that guardrail impact. Does the guilt + the anxiety combo ever actually go away? Has anyone been through something similar where you were at fault but still struggled to process it?

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9 replies

  • 14
    calm-wren-465

    You're not weird for posting this here. I was at fault in my accident too — ran a red light I swore was yellow, hit another car, hurt myself and the other driver. The guilt on top of the physical recovery is its own separate thing and honestly I think it's harder in some ways. Eight months out I was still pretty raw. It does get quieter over time, but it took longer than I expected.

    • 16
      tidy-swan-686

      Not sure of your insurance situation but I'd just say — be careful about how freely you talk about fault, especially in writing. I'm not saying lie, but recorded statements and written accounts can follow you. Just something to keep in mind if claims or anything legal is still open.

    • 19
      clever-newt-417

      On the practical side: even in at-fault accidents, your own injuries may still be covered depending on whether you carry MedPay or PIP on your policy. A lot of people don't realize that. Those coverages exist specifically to pay your medical bills regardless of fault. If you haven't already gone through your own policy with a fine-tooth comb, it's worth doing — especially with the concussion follow-ups potentially still coming. This isn't legal advice, just a flag that at-fault doesn't automatically mean you're on your own for medical costs.

    • 3
      gentle-neighbor975

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

  • 22
    tidy-vole-551

    The anxiety you're describing — the flinching on curves, the intrusive replays, waking up to sounds from the crash — that's not just 'being shaken up.' That pattern can be a trauma response, and it doesn't care whether you caused the accident or not. Your nervous system went through something terrifying. If you haven't talked to anyone about the mental side of this, it might be worth looking into even a few sessions with a therapist who works with trauma. The headaches are also worth keeping an eye on — post-concussion symptoms can linger and flare up with stress.

    • 13
      calm-hare-638

      The fact that you're this self-aware about it — not minimizing it, not blaming road conditions or whatever — actually says a lot about you. Be a little gentler with yourself. You made a mistake, you survived it, and you clearly haven't brushed it off. That matters.

    • 14
      clever-vole-651

      I know this might sound hollow but — that other driver swerved in time. You got out. You're here to write this post. I'm not saying the guilt and the fear aren't real, because they obviously are. But sometimes I think the crashes that almost went catastrophically wrong are harder to shake precisely because your brain knows how close it was. You didn't just get lucky once that night, you got lucky like three times.

    • 15
      bold-fox-561

      Honest answer: the guilt fades when you stop treating this like a personality flaw and start treating it like an event that happened. You made a bad call that night. So have millions of other drivers who never had to face consequences for it. You did, and you're living with it — that's already more accountability than most people practice. Start driving again, even short trips, even if it's uncomfortable. Avoidance makes the fear worse.

  • 17
    quiet-hare-909

    Eight months later and still having headaches — are you actually following up with a doctor on that? Because mild TBIs can have ongoing effects that get underreported because people just chalk the symptoms up to stress. I don't want to alarm you but that's not something to just wait out without at least checking in with someone.