The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
hearty-crow-571

I caused a wreck and I can't stop replaying it in my head — how do you move past the guilt?

This happened about three weeks ago and I still wake up thinking about it every single morning.

I was merging onto a surface road from a parking lot exit — one of those spots where a big delivery truck was parked right at the corner and completely killed my sightline to the left. I crept out as far as I could, thought I had enough of a gap, and pulled forward. A sedan came around faster than I expected and clipped my front end pretty hard. Both cars were damaged. Nobody went to the hospital, thank god, and the other driver was actually really calm about the whole thing — which almost made me feel worse somehow.

I'm 20. I bought my car with money I saved working doubles at a restaurant for almost two years. It's been declared a total loss. That stings financially, obviously, but honestly the money isn't even what's keeping me up at night.

It's the fact that I put someone else at risk because of a mistake I made. I keep thinking — what if they had a kid in the backseat? What if someone had been going a little faster? I know logically it was an accident and visibility was genuinely bad, but my brain keeps treating it like I did something unforgivable.

I've talked to my insurance, I've handled the paperwork side of things. But nobody warned me about the emotional weight of being the at-fault driver.

Has anyone else been through this? How long does the guilt last? Did it ever actually go away or did you just get better at living with it?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    patient-vole-595

    Three weeks of daily guilt spirals is enough. You made a mistake in a genuinely bad visibility situation, you owned it, you dealt with it. At some point you have to decide that punishing yourself indefinitely doesn't actually help the other driver or anyone else. File it under 'hard lesson learned' and let yourself move forward.

    • 8
      weathered-overpass866

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

    • 1
      careful-parent924

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 17
    kind-dove-676

    I was at fault in an accident two years ago — rear-ended someone when traffic stopped suddenly on the highway. No one was hurt but I cried every day for like a month. Honestly what helped me most was reminding myself that the other person accepted that it was an accident too. The fact that they stayed calm and didn't escalate was them telling you they understood. That's not nothing.

    • 18
      careful-mole-752

      What you're describing — the intrusive replaying, the 'what if' spirals, the disrupted sleep — that's actually a really common stress response after any kind of traumatic event, even when you're the one who caused it. Don't dismiss your own experience just because you weren't physically hurt. If it's still this intense in another few weeks, talking to someone (even just a counselor through your school or employer) can really help interrupt that loop.

    • 10
      weary-walker554

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

  • 10
    steady-crow-697

    Please be gentle with yourself. You're clearly not a careless person — a careless person wouldn't be losing sleep over this. The guilt you feel is actually proof that you care about other people. That matters.

  • 10
    patient-sparrow-982

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but: everyone walked away. The other driver was kind. You handled your responsibilities. You're reflecting and taking it seriously. That's honestly more than a lot of people do. You're going to be a more careful, more aware driver because of this — and that matters for everyone you'll ever share the road with.

  • 9
    mellow-otter-928

    Just make sure while you're processing all this emotionally that you're not saying anything extra to the insurance company that could be used against you later. Adjusters sometimes reach back out weeks later asking innocent-sounding follow-up questions. Keep your answers factual and brief. The guilt is valid but don't let it make you over-explain things to people whose job is to minimize payouts.

  • 9
    daring-sparrow-235

    Worked claims for years. You would not believe how many at-fault accidents happen in exactly this scenario — obstructed sightlines at parking lot exits and driveways are genuinely dangerous and the infrastructure is usually to blame as much as the driver. That doesn't erase your role in it, but it does mean you're not uniquely reckless. It's a really common factor in low-speed collisions. Be kind to yourself.

  • 9
    curious-kestrel-367

    Did you get a police report filed? And did your insurance formally determine fault yet or is that still pending? I ask because sometimes 'at fault' isn't as clear-cut as it feels in the moment — if visibility was genuinely obstructed there may be shared factors at play. Not saying avoid accountability, just saying don't sign off on full responsibility emotionally or legally until everything is sorted.

    • 10
      honest-traveler642

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.