The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Car accidentsquiet-finch-888

Crash 4 months after getting my license — can't make myself get back on the highway

I don't even know if this is the right place to post this but I needed somewhere to put it.

Back in the spring I got hit while I was still basically a brand new driver — had my license maybe four or five months. It happened on an on-ramp, the kind where you have a really short window to get up to speed and slide in. Someone came flying up behind me and I ended up getting clipped and spun into the shoulder. Nobody was seriously hurt physically but I was shaking for hours. A woman who pulled over stayed with me until the tow truck came and honestly I think about her a lot — just a stranger who didn't have to stop.

The insurance stuff eventually got sorted out. That part is mostly done. But what nobody warned me about is how it just rewires your brain.

I have been driving again since — local roads, no problem. But the second I see a highway entrance my chest gets tight and I start making excuses to take surface streets. I've added like 20-25 minutes to trips I used to take normally. My friends think I'm being dramatic. I don't think I'm being dramatic.

Has anyone else gone through this after an early accident? Did it get better on its own, or did you have to actually do something about it — like therapy, or taking lessons again, or something else? I feel like I'm grieving the version of me that just got in the car and didn't think about it.

Any advice or just "I've been there" would genuinely help right now.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 20
    kind-vole-150

    You are absolutely not being dramatic. I got rear-ended about two years ago and for months I couldn't drive on any road with a speed limit over 45 without my hands going white-knuckle on the wheel. What actually helped me was going back to basics — I literally asked a family member to ride with me and we just did short highway stretches during low-traffic times, like early Sunday mornings. Tiny exposures, over and over, until it started feeling boring instead of terrifying. It took longer than I wanted it to, but it did eventually click.

  • 15
    spry-owl-759

    What you're describing — the tight chest, the avoidance, the rerouting — those are really classic anxiety responses after a traumatic event. Your nervous system basically learned that highway on-ramps are dangerous and it's trying to protect you. That's not weakness, that's just how brains work. I'd genuinely suggest looking into a therapist who does EMDR or exposure-based work. It's specifically designed for this kind of thing and a lot of people see real movement in just a handful of sessions. The driving confidence stuff often follows once the underlying fear gets addressed.

  • 19
    calm-hare-832

    The part about grieving the version of yourself that just got in the car without thinking — I felt that so much. That casualness about driving is something most people take for granted until something happens. You're not broken, you just went through something scary before you even had time to feel confident in the first place. Be patient with yourself, seriously.

  • 11
    gentle-mole-757

    Get a driving instructor — not a friend or family member, an actual professional. Tell them exactly what happened and what you're working on. They deal with this more than you'd think, and having someone in the passenger seat whose literal job is handling scary situations can take a huge amount of pressure off you. Do it before the avoidance habit gets more locked in.

    • 7
      tired-commuter268

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 19
    wise-fox-835

    Four months out and you're already back on local roads and asking how to move forward — that's actually real progress even if it doesn't feel like it. Some people stop driving altogether after crashes like that. The fact that you want to get back to normal and are actively looking for ways to do it means you're already most of the way there mentally.

  • 10
    clever-vole-568

    When you say the insurance stuff is "mostly done" — is it fully settled or just quiet for now? I ask because anxiety and driving avoidance can sometimes be part of a larger pain-and-suffering claim, especially if it's affecting your daily life. If you haven't actually signed a final release yet, it might be worth making sure that part of the impact is on the record somewhere before anything closes out. Just something to think about.

    • 9
      hopeful-wanderer852

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

  • 10
    hearty-dove-718

    Seconding what the person above said. Psychological impact — including documented anxiety, therapy visits, and lifestyle changes like avoiding certain roads — can be part of a personal injury claim. If there was any at-fault driver involved and you haven't fully settled, talk to someone before you sign anything. Once you sign a release it's basically done. Not telling you what to do, just want you to have the full picture.

  • 13
    bright-finch-322

    Please don't let the adjuster's silence make you think the case is over if you haven't gotten paperwork. Sometimes they go quiet hoping you'll move on and forget to follow up. The mental health piece of this is real and it has value — don't let it get waved away just because there weren't broken bones.