The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
Car accidentsgenuine-wren-993

I don't recognize myself anymore since the crash — anyone else feel like they lost who they were?

TW: chronic injury, grief, dark thoughts

I've been lurking here for a while and finally feel ready to put this into words. Bear with me.

Six months ago I was living what felt like my best chapter yet. I'd just landed a job I actually cared about, was training for a half-marathon, and had finally built a social life that felt real. Running and hiking were basically my whole personality — weekends outside, trail clubs, the works. I felt capable in a way I never had before.

Then a driver blew through a red light and hit my driver's side door at full speed while I was in the intersection on a green. I didn't even see it coming. One second everything was normal, the next my car was spinning and there was glass everywhere.

I walked away — technically. But over the following weeks I developed nerve pain down my left arm, constant headaches, and what my doctor is now calling a vestibular injury that wrecks my balance. I had to drop out of the race I'd been training months for. I had to cancel hiking trips. I had to tell friends I couldn't make it out because standing in a loud bar makes me dizzy and exhausted.

I know I'm alive. I know it could've been so much worse. But honestly? Some days I catch myself grieving the version of me that existed before that intersection. I look at old photos from hikes and feel like I'm looking at a stranger.

Has anyone else gone through this kind of identity loss after an accident? How did you find your way back — or did you just find a new way forward? I'm struggling to know which one I'm even looking for.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 20
    spry-vole-733

    What you're describing — the loss of activities, hobbies, your social life, your sense of self — that's actually something attorneys call 'loss of enjoyment of life' and it's a legitimate part of damages in a personal injury claim, not just medical bills. I'm not saying that to make this transactional, just to say: what you're going through is recognized legally as a real harm, not just 'being emotional about an accident.' Your suffering has weight.

  • 19
    steady-swift-542

    Vestibular injuries are so underestimated — they're invisible on the outside but completely disabling on the inside. The dizziness, the noise sensitivity, the fatigue — people around you often don't get it because you look fine. Please make sure you're seeing a vestibular physical therapist if you aren't already, they're different from regular PT and genuinely specialize in what you're dealing with. And the emotional toll of losing physical identity is documented and real — you're not catastrophizing.

    • 5
      tidy-swift-516

      I just want to say — you posted this, and that took courage. The dark thoughts you hinted at, please don't carry those alone. Is there anyone in your life you can be honest with about how bad the bad days actually get?

    • 9
      gentle-marmot-242

      Just a heads-up — if the other driver's insurance has been in contact with you, be very careful what you say about your recovery and especially your mental state. Adjusters will sometimes use phrases like 'doing better' or 'getting back to normal' to minimize future claims. You don't owe them a wellness update.

  • 17
    sharp-kestrel-293

    I could have written this myself, word for word. After my accident I kept opening my running apps and staring at old workout logs like they belonged to someone else. What helped me — and I won't pretend it was quick — was letting myself actually grieve it instead of pushing past the feelings. A therapist who specialized in chronic injury was the thing that finally cracked it open for me. You're not being dramatic. This is real loss.

    • 8
      candid-crow-550

      Okay practical stuff because I think you need it alongside the emotional support: are you documenting everything? Symptom journals, every doctor's visit, every activity you've had to cancel? A vestibular injury that affects your daily life and your ability to work and exercise is significant — that documentation matters a lot if you ever pursue a claim. Don't let months go by without a paper trail.

  • 16
    gentle-badger-532

    Not legal advice, but I will say — vestibular injuries combined with documented lifestyle impact tend to be cases where having someone in your corner early really matters. Insurers often move fast to settle before the full scope of an injury like yours is even understood. Don't sign anything releasing your claims until you've at least had a free consult with a PI attorney. Most won't charge you unless they recover something for you.

  • 7
    kind-grouse-485

    I hear you on all of it. I also want to gently offer: some of the people I know who went through the worst recoveries came out the other side with a relationship to their body that was actually more compassionate than before. Not the same — different. You're still in the thick of it right now, which makes that impossible to see. But the person who loved those trails doesn't just disappear.

  • 7
    candid-owl-949

    I'm sorry you're going through this, genuinely. Quick question though — have you gotten a second opinion on the vestibular diagnosis? I ask because I've heard of people getting misdiagnosed early on and not getting the right treatment for months. Just want to make sure you're working with someone who really specializes in this and not just a general practitioner who's doing their best.

    • 2
      tired-optimist667

      How long did it end up taking in your case?