The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
sharp-swift-008

Didn't expect to be here — multi-car pileup got me today and I'm still shaking

I don't really know why I'm writing this out but I feel like I need to put it somewhere.

I was on my way to pick up my kid from practice this afternoon, totally stopped in traffic on the highway on-ramp. Out of nowhere — boom. Then another boom. Then another. I don't even fully understand what happened in those seconds. One minute I'm tapping my steering wheel to the radio, the next there's dust everywhere, my ears are ringing, and my chest hurts from the seatbelt locking.

Turns out it was a four-vehicle chain reaction. I was second in line and got hit from behind and pushed into the car in front of me. The driver who started it all apparently never even touched their brakes — witnesses told me this after. I couldn't get out of my car at first because the door frame had buckled slightly. A stranger — some guy in a work vest — came and helped me get it open. I didn't get his name and I genuinely wish I had.

My neck and upper back are already stiffening up and it's only been a few hours. I went to urgent care, they took some X-rays, nothing broken they said, but told me to expect soreness to "really set in" over the next couple days. Great.

The thing that's messing with me most right now is the calls. My phone has been going insane with law firms calling — like, how do they even get your number that fast?? It feels vulture-y and it made a really scary day feel even more chaotic.

My car is almost certainly totaled. I loved that car. Had it for four years and took immaculate care of it.

Anyway. Hi, I guess. Hope I don't need to be here long.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 12
    candid-marmot-053

    I was in a pileup last year and that delayed soreness they warned you about is real. I felt okay-ish day one and by day three I could barely turn my head. Please don't skip any follow-up appointments even if you think you're fine — it matters for your health and honestly for your claim too.

    • 5
      swift-heron-408

      Oh my gosh, I'm so sorry. The fact that you were even coherent enough to go to urgent care the same day says a lot. Please be gentle with yourself tonight — your body just went through something traumatic even if nothing is "broken." ❤️

    • 11
      genuine-mole-666

      The urgent care doc was right that the soreness peaks later — usually 48 to 72 hours out for whiplash-type injuries. If you start getting headaches, jaw pain, tingling in your arms or hands, or any dizziness in the next few days, don't brush it off. Those can all be signs of things worth getting checked out further. A follow-up with your regular doctor or a spine specialist is worth it even if you feel "okay."

    • 7
      plain-swift-948

      You walked away. Your kid still got picked up. The stranger in the work vest showed up when you needed him. I know your car is gone and your body hurts and it's a lot — but you're here writing about it, and that actually matters. Wishing you a smoother road from here.

  • 10
    cool-tern-634

    Watch out for the at-fault driver's insurance calling you super quickly and being really friendly. That niceness has a purpose — they want a recorded statement from you while you're still shaken up and before you know the full extent of your injuries. You are NOT required to give one right away. Don't let them rush you.

    • 1
      calm-traveler850

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 22
    quick-swift-701

    Worked in claims for years. The "nothing broken on X-ray" thing at urgent care is honestly just a starting point — soft tissue injuries don't show up on X-rays at all. Adjusters know this too, which is exactly why some of them will try to settle fast before you've seen a specialist or had an MRI. Don't accept any offer until you actually know what you're dealing with medically. That can take weeks.

    • 8
      kind-passenger144

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

  • 18
    keen-otter-826

    A few practical things worth doing now while it's fresh: write down everything you remember about the crash in as much detail as possible — sequence of impacts, what you saw, how you felt, the road conditions, all of it. Take photos of your car before it gets moved or evaluated. Keep every single medical receipt and record. None of this commits you to anything, it just preserves your options.

    • 1
      careful-traveler476

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 14
    curious-swan-562

    Those law firm calls are coming from lead-generation services that monitor police and accident reports — it's a whole industry and yeah it's gross. You can ignore all of them. If and when you decide you want legal help, look on your own terms. You're not on anyone's clock right now except your own.

  • 11
    sharp-grouse-174

    Did the police come to the scene? And was a report filed? Just making sure because in a four-car situation the official report is going to be really important for establishing who's actually at fault — especially if the story gets complicated between multiple insurance companies later.

    • 3
      hopeful-passenger292

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