The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentssteady-newt-455

Crash scenes in TV shows still wreck me 18 months later — anyone else?

I don't really know how to start this so I'll just say it. I was in a really bad accident on the highway about a year and a half ago. A truck clipped my car at high speed and we went into the median. The other driver didn't make it. The whole thing was ruled not my fault — wrong place, wrong time — but that doesn't quiet the voice in my head that replays it constantly.

I've been doing therapy, EMDR actually, and it genuinely helps with a lot of it. I'm functional. I go to work. I laugh at things again. Progress is real.

But here's the thing nobody warned me about: TV shows and movies. It comes out of nowhere. A car wreck in a drama, a funeral scene tied to a crash, even just screeching tires in a commercial. My chest goes tight, my hands go cold, and I'm suddenly not on my couch anymore.

I've started looking up episode guides and content warnings before I watch anything, which helps sometimes. But I was at a friend's place last weekend and a show we were watching just... went there. And I had to excuse myself to the bathroom and sit on the floor for five minutes.

My therapist is great but obviously I can't call her mid-episode. I'm mostly looking for what other people actually do in the moment — like real coping tricks, not textbook stuff. And honestly... is this ever going to get better? Does the hair-trigger eventually calm down?

Thanks for reading. This community is the only place I feel like people actually get it.

8replies

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8 replies

  • 20
    genuine-owl-982

    The bathroom floor thing hit me hard because I've done the exact same thing. After my accident I couldn't even watch the news without flinching at traffic reports. What helped me in the moment was something my therapist called 'grounding' — I'd press my feet flat on the floor, feel the texture, name five things I could see. It sounds almost too simple but it genuinely interrupts the spiral for me. It does get less intense over time, I promise. Not gone, but less sharp.

    • 24
      kind-sparrow-764

      What you're describing is a really normal trauma response — your nervous system learned that certain stimuli = danger, and it's trying to protect you even when you're safe on a couch. The physiological reaction (cold hands, tight chest) is your body flooding with stress hormones before your conscious brain even processes what triggered it. That's why thinking your way out of it in the moment is so hard. Grounding techniques, box breathing, even just putting something cold in your hand can help signal to your body that the threat isn't real. The good news is that the nervous system can be retrained. EMDR is excellent for exactly this — stick with it.

    • 11
      bold-fox-919

      Honestly? Tell your friends. I know it feels like a lot to put on people but 'I went through a bad accident and sometimes crash scenes hit me hard' is like a ten-second sentence. You don't owe anyone your whole story. But you're currently white-knuckling it alone in bathrooms to protect other people from a thirty-second conversation. That math doesn't add up.

    • 8
      plain-vole-688

      Slightly different angle — if you're still in any kind of legal or insurance process from the accident, keep a note of these episodes. Not in a dramatic way, just a quick log with dates. Ongoing psychological impact is part of damages in personal injury cases and things like 'still experiencing trauma responses 18 months later' are relevant. A lot of people document the physical stuff and forget the mental health piece entirely.

  • 19
    quick-vole-403

    Not doubting your experience at all, but I'm curious — have you told your therapist specifically about the in-the-moment piece? Like that the coping tools aren't accessible when you're mid-trigger in a social setting? Because that feels like a specific gap worth naming directly in session, rather than a general 'crash scenes are hard' conversation. Sometimes the framing matters.

  • 12
    plain-crane-145

    I just want to say you sound incredibly strong for even talking about this. A lot of people would just bury it. I hope you know the people around you would want to know if something was hard for you — your friends at that movie night probably would have turned it off in a heartbeat if they'd known.

  • 5
    calm-sparrow-952

    The fact that you can sit in a friend's living room and watch a show at all, 18 months out from something that traumatic, is genuinely not nothing. I'm not minimizing the bathroom floor moments — those are real and they're hard. But you're there, you're in social spaces, you're engaging with life. That's movement, even when it doesn't feel like it.

    • 10
      plain-stoat-578

      Doesthedogdie.com and similar sites have expanded a lot — you can actually search for car accident content warnings now before watching something. It's not perfect but it's helped me avoid a few ambushes. Also I started just telling close friends a short version — like 'hey I went through something and car crash scenes are rough for me, cool if we skip anything like that?' Most people are way more understanding than we expect them to be.