The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentspatient-beaver-515

Coming to terms with lifelong pain after my crash — how do you actually do it?

Hey everyone. Long post, sorry in advance.

About eight months ago I was rear-ended at highway speed by a driver who blew through a construction zone without braking. The impact shoved my car into the vehicle ahead of me, so I got hit twice basically simultaneously. I ended up with two fractured vertebrae, a badly torn rotator cuff, and nerve damage down my left arm that my surgeon describes as "probably permanent."

I did the surgeries. I did — and still do — the PT. By every clinical measure I'm recovering "well." My care team keeps using words like "functional" and "encouraging trajectory" and I know they mean it kindly but honestly it's starting to feel hollow.

What they can't fix is the constant background hum of pain. It's not always sharp. Sometimes it's just this low, relentless ache that's there when I wake up, there when I'm trying to work, there when I'm trying to sleep. My neurologist was pretty straightforward with me: this is likely something I manage for the rest of my life, not something that goes away.

I'm 34. "The rest of my life" is a long time to sit with that.

I'm not really asking about the legal or insurance side right now — I know that stuff is in motion. I just want to hear from people who have been told the same thing. How did you mentally get to a place where you could live with it instead of just being angry at it every single day? Did therapy help? Medication management? Just time?

I feel like I'm grieving a version of myself that isn't coming back and I don't know how to move through that. Any honest experiences welcome.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 16
    careful-dove-357

    I could have written this post two years ago, word for word. Nerve damage from my accident left me with this burning sensation in my foot that my doctor says is just... mine now. The grief piece is SO real and nobody talks about it enough. For me what actually helped was finding a therapist who specifically works with chronic pain and illness — not just general talk therapy. It took a few tries to find the right person but it genuinely changed how I relate to the pain. It didn't make it less, but it stopped being the thing that defined every single day. Hang in there.

  • 17
    genuine-lynx-681

    What you're describing — grieving your pre-injury self — is something I see constantly with patients who've had traumatic injuries, and it is a completely legitimate form of grief. There's actually a clinical term for it: adjustment disorder with depressed mood, and it's incredibly common after life-altering physical trauma.

    A few practical things that have helped patients I've worked with: pain psychology (different from regular therapy, specifically targets the brain-pain connection), low-impact movement like water therapy to keep the nervous system from "catastrophizing," and being really honest with your prescribing doctor about how the pain is affecting your quality of life — not just your function. You deserve to have that conversation openly.

    • 0
      kind-driver686

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 9
    sharp-heron-343

    I just want to say I'm really sorry. 34 and being told this is permanent — that's devastating and you're allowed to be angry and sad about it. Please don't let anyone rush you into "acceptance" before you're ready. You went through something traumatic and your feelings about it are valid.

  • 10
    mellow-otter-974

    Not going to pretend this isn't hard, because it clearly is. But I will say — I know a few people who got similar long-term diagnoses after accidents and found that the relationship with the pain genuinely shifts over time even when the pain itself doesn't. Like your brain stops treating it as an emergency alarm and starts treating it as background noise you can turn down a little. That adaptation is real, it just takes longer than any of us want.

  • 8
    tidy-dove-025

    Not legal advice, but — since you mentioned the legal side is "in motion," just make sure whoever is handling your case understands how to quantify future pain and suffering, not just your current medical bills. Permanent nerve damage and chronic pain have real long-term economic and quality-of-life value that needs to be documented properly, including through pain journals and ongoing specialist notes. A lot of people settle before that picture is fully built out. That's all I'll say.

  • 15
    hearty-sparrow-947

    Please please please do not let anyone pressure you into settling while you're still in the middle of figuring out what "permanent" actually means for your life. Insurance companies love when injured people are emotionally exhausted — it makes low offers look appealing just because you want it to be over. Your future self deserves better than a rushed number.

  • 10
    wise-dove-283

    Honest answer: it took me about 18 months to stop being furious at my body every day after my accident left me with chronic hip pain. What actually moved the needle was acceptance-based therapy (look up ACT — Acceptance and Commitment Therapy), a pain specialist who wasn't just throwing pills at me, and genuinely lowering my expectations for "good days" so I could actually recognize them when they happened. It's not inspiring advice but it's what worked.

    • 2
      calm-commuter633

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 18
    calm-newt-799

    When you say nerve damage — has that been confirmed by a neurologist with actual nerve conduction studies, or is it more of a working diagnosis? I ask because I was told something similar early in my recovery and it turned out some of what I was feeling was actually muscular and did improve significantly with the right PT. Not saying yours isn't permanent, just wondering if you've had the full workup.

    • 6
      calm-traveler536

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.