The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Car accidentsbright-stoat-861

Does anyone else's brain turn every weird sensation into a death sentence after their crash?

It's been about eight months since a delivery van ran a red light and T-boned me on my way to work. Physically I got off "lucky" — a mild concussion, some soft tissue stuff in my shoulder and upper back, and what my doctor thinks is nerve irritation running down my left arm. Nothing broken, nothing requiring surgery. I've been doing chiro and physio consistently and I'm genuinely improving.

But my brain is a completely different story.

Every single time I feel a weird tingle in my fingers or a random muscle twitch or even just a headache — I go straight to worst-case. Like, full-on "this is the thing they missed on the MRI, I'm about to have a stroke" territory. I'll be totally fine for a few days and then one odd sensation will send me down a two-hour rabbit hole of medical googling at midnight. It's exhausting.

I talked to my GP about it and she said post-accident health anxiety is really common, especially when you've had actual physical symptoms that were real — so now your nervous system doesn't know what to ignore anymore. That kind of makes sense to me but it doesn't make the spiral stop happening.

I started seeing a therapist who does somatic work and it's slowly helping, but progress feels really uneven.

Has anyone else dealt with this specific flavor of anxiety after a crash? The kind where your own body feels like the enemy? What actually helped you? I feel like I'm doing all the "right" things and still can't get out of my own head.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 20
    steady-hare-492

    Stop Googling symptoms. Seriously, just stop. I know you know this. Put a parental control on WebMD if you have to. That habit is feeding the anxiety loop more than almost anything else — every search is your brain "checking for danger" which just confirms to your nervous system that danger is real. Cold turkey if you can.

  • 10
    kind-raven-607

    Oh man, this was me for almost a full year after my accident. The thing that finally helped was when my physio explained that healing nerves literally do produce random tingles and sensations — it's actually a sign of recovery, not damage. Once I had that reframe I could talk myself down a little faster. Still not perfect but way better than midnight googling spirals.

    • 9
      kind-bison-664

      Your GP is onto something real. There's actually a name for it — somatic hypervigilance. Your nervous system experienced a genuine threat, your body had real symptoms, and now your threat-detection system is stuck on high sensitivity. It doesn't know the difference between "nerve healing twitch" and "danger twitch" anymore, so it flags everything.

      The somatic therapy is a really good call for this specifically. Some people also find EMDR helpful for the accident-trauma piece underneath the anxiety. Be patient with yourself — your brain is trying to protect you, it's just overcorrecting badly right now.

  • 8
    clear-swan-737

    Slightly different angle here — make sure you're documenting all of this with your doctor. The anxiety, the sleep disruption, the hypervigilance, all of it. Psychological injury after an accident is very real and very compensable, but if you never told a doctor about it officially it's like it didn't happen as far as any future claim goes. Not trying to make this about money, just don't let it fall through the cracks while you're focused on the physical stuff.

  • 7
    mellow-lynx-579

    I just want to say — the way you described it, your body feeling like the enemy, that really got to me. That sounds so lonely and draining. I hope you're being as kind to yourself as you would be to someone else going through this. You've been through something genuinely scary.

    • 3
      careful-walker819

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 6
    warm-owl-125

    The uneven progress thing is so real and nobody warns you about it. I'd have three good days and think I was finally through it and then crash hard again. My therapist called it "two steps forward, one step back" and said the good days getting slightly longer was the actual metric to watch, not whether the bad days disappeared. Took me a while to believe her but she was right.

    • 19
      genuine-crane-467

      Echoing what was said above — the mental health component of accident injuries is legitimate and documented psychological harm can absolutely be part of a personal injury claim. Keep records, keep attending your therapy appointments, and don't downplay it to anyone involved in your case. Not legal advice, just something worth knowing.

    • 7
      hearty-crane-535

      Eight months out and you're already in therapy and physio and aware enough of the pattern to describe it this clearly? Honestly that's a lot. Some people never even connect the anxiety back to the accident. You're ahead of where a lot of people are, even when it doesn't feel like it.