The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
plain-otter-270

My daughter survived a rollover but I can't stop shaking — is this normal?

I don't even know where to start. My daughter is 20 and goes to college about three hours from where I live. Six days ago I got a text from a number I didn't recognize that just said 'there's been an accident, call me.' I almost didn't. When I did, it was one of her friends telling me she'd been airlifted to a regional trauma center after the car she was a passenger in went off an embankment and rolled.

I drove those three hours alone not knowing if she was going to be alive when I got there. She was. She has a fractured collarbone, some cracked ribs, and a concussion, and the doctors say she's going to recover. I should be celebrating.

But I can't eat. I keep startling awake at 3am replaying that phone call. Every time I close my eyes I see the photos of the car that got texted around in her friend group — it's unrecognizable. I cried in the hospital parking garage for 45 minutes before I could go back in and sit with her.

She's asking me questions about the other driver, about insurance, about whether she needs a lawyer. I have no idea how to answer any of that, and honestly I can barely function enough to figure it out.

Has anyone else gone through this from the parent side? How long does this feeling last? And if anyone has advice on the insurance/legal stuff for injured passengers, I'd take that too — just need to hear from real people right now.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 12
    wise-elk-859

    I was the kid in the accident, not the parent, but my mom has told me so many times that the drive to the hospital was the worst experience of her life — worse than her own car accident years earlier. What you're describing sounds exactly like what she went through. It took her a few weeks before she stopped jumping every time her phone rang. Give yourself grace. You just lived through something traumatic too, even if you weren't in the car.

  • 15
    plain-otter-042

    What you're feeling has a name — secondary traumatic stress, sometimes called vicarious trauma. Parents, partners, first responders — anyone who gets that 'worst moment' phone call can experience it. The intrusive thoughts, the sleep disruption, the physical symptoms like not being able to eat — those are your nervous system doing exactly what it's designed to do after a shock. Most people start to feel it ease within a few weeks, but if it's not improving or it's getting worse, please talk to someone. A few sessions with a therapist who does trauma work can make a real difference. You matter in this too, not just your daughter.

    • 4
      kind-wanderer122

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 4
    sharp-wolf-367

    I'm so sorry. I can't imagine getting that kind of text. Please don't put pressure on yourself to 'be okay' just because she survived. Relief and trauma can absolutely live in the same body at the same time. You went through something too.

    • 9
      hopeful-wanderer797

      Same boat here. Did anyone mention a deadline to watch out for?

  • 8
    patient-stoat-840

    On the practical side — and I know you said you can barely think about it, so just file this away for later — if the other driver was at fault, their insurance is going to be in contact soon. Don't let your daughter talk to the other driver's adjuster alone and definitely don't let her sign or agree to anything before she knows the full picture of her injuries. Adjusters are friendly for a reason. They want to close the claim fast and cheap before she knows how much those cracked ribs and that concussion are actually going to affect her.

  • 17
    bold-badger-131

    As a passenger, your daughter is actually in a relatively straightforward position legally — she didn't cause the accident, so fault arguments are mostly between the drivers and their insurers. That said, she has the right to pursue a claim for her medical bills, lost wages if she misses work or class, and pain and suffering. She should document everything: save every medical record, every bill, take photos of her bruising and injuries as they develop over the next week (they often look worse before they look better), and write down how she's feeling day to day. A personal injury attorney can evaluate her situation — most do free consultations — and she doesn't need to rush, but she also shouldn't wait forever since states have deadlines.

  • 7
    candid-owl-889

    Not legal advice, but just to echo what others said — passenger claims are generally cleaner than driver vs. driver disputes. The main thing is not to let anyone pressure her into settling quickly. Concussions especially can have lingering effects that don't show up for weeks. A good PI attorney will tell her to wait until she's reached maximum medical improvement before even thinking about a number. Most offer free consults so there's no harm in her making a call just to understand her options.

    • 1
      weary-driver941

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 12
    swift-grouse-947

    I know it probably feels hollow to hear this right now, but the fact that you're asking these questions — for her, while you're still shaking — says a lot about you as a parent. She's lucky to have someone in her corner who's already thinking about protecting her even when you're running on empty. That counts for a lot.

    • 10
      honest-driver734

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

  • 7
    sharp-tern-366

    Two things: First, what you're feeling is a completely normal response to an abnormal situation — it will get better, just not on a schedule you can control. Second, tell your daughter not to post anything about the accident on social media. No photos, no 'I'm okay!' updates, nothing. Insurance companies absolutely look at that stuff and it can be used to minimize her claim. Boring advice but important.

    • 8
      kind-commuter582

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.