The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Car accidentsplain-stoat-603

I caused my own crash and the guilt is destroying me from the inside out

I don't even know why I'm posting this here but I need to say it somewhere anonymously because I can't tell anyone in my real life.

A few weeks ago I made a really stupid decision. I hadn't slept in almost two days — I was helping a family member move and just kept pushing through. I knew I was in no condition to drive. My body was running on fumes and energy drinks. But I told myself it was only fifteen minutes home and I'd be fine.

I wasn't fine. I drifted into the next lane on a two-lane road and sideswiped a parked delivery truck along the shoulder. Nobody else was hurt — thank god — but my car was totaled and I walked away with a fractured collarbone and a pretty serious concussion.

The responding officer was actually really kind about it. No citation, just a report. But that almost makes it worse somehow? Like I feel like I deserved more consequences than I got.

I keep replaying it. What if someone had been standing near that truck. What if a kid had been on a bike. What if, what if, what if.

I've barely eaten since it happened. I canceled plans with everyone. My family thinks I'm just resting and recovering physically, but mentally I am in a really dark place. The guilt is genuinely suffocating.

Has anyone else caused their own accident and had to live with that? How do you stop punishing yourself? I'm not looking for legal stuff right now — just... has anyone been here?

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 19
    silent-crane-178

    I caused a crash two years ago — rear-ended someone because I was messing with my GPS. Nobody was seriously hurt but I spiraled hard for months. The 'what ifs' are brutal. What helped me was eventually talking to a therapist who specialized in trauma, because guilt after accidents is its own kind of PTSD. You're not alone in this at all.

    • 7
      spry-hare-424

      Please please please eat something. I know that sounds small but you can't process any of this — emotionally or physically — if your body has nothing to run on. I'm not dismissing the guilt, it sounds really real and heavy. But you matter too, even when it doesn't feel like it right now.

    • 10
      quiet-raven-081

      From a purely practical standpoint — even when you're the at-fault driver, your own medical bills still need to get sorted out. Your health insurance, any MedPay on your auto policy, stuff like that. I'd gently suggest, when you're ready, taking a look at what coverages you actually have. A lot of people don't realize they have benefits available to them even in single-car accidents. No rush right now, just keep it in the back of your mind.

    • 0
      careful-survivor796

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

  • 18
    sharp-crane-321

    The concussion alone can intensify feelings of anxiety, guilt, and depression significantly — people don't talk about that enough. Your brain literally took a physical hit. Not sleeping, not eating, isolating yourself... that's a warning sign I'd take seriously. Please loop in a doctor about how you're feeling emotionally, not just the collarbone and concussion symptoms. It all connects.

    • 0
      steady-traveler626

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 12
    plain-newt-352

    I know this is hard to hear right now, but the fact that you're carrying this guilt so heavily actually says something decent about you as a person. You're not someone who shrugs off responsibility. That matters. The goal isn't to stop caring — it's to find a way to carry it without it crushing you.

    • 6
      hearty-tern-547

      I'm not trying to be harsh but I'm a little curious — when you say no citation was issued, do you know if the accident report specifies a cause? I ask because depending on your insurance situation that detail might matter later even if it feels irrelevant right now. Just something to be aware of when you're in a clearer headspace.

    • 9
      hopeful-driver668

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 20
    quiet-otter-635

    You made a bad call. Nobody got killed. You got hurt. Now you have to actually heal — both things. Lying in your room starving yourself isn't penance, it's just damage on top of damage. Make an appointment with someone you can talk to. That's the next step, full stop.

  • 12
    quick-bison-464

    Not legal advice, but just want to gently flag: even at-fault drivers can sometimes have coverage questions worth sorting out — uninsured property, medical payments coverage, etc. More importantly though, what you're describing emotionally sounds really serious. Guilt and trauma after accidents are real and recognized — please talk to someone. The legal stuff can wait. You can't.

    • 9
      weary-commuter584

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