The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
Car accidentspatient-raven-309

Driving anxiety after our crash is ruining my life — does it ever actually get better?

Possible trigger warning — I'll keep the details light but this involves a pretty scary crash.

About four months ago I was driving my kids home on a two-lane rural road when a pickup coming the other direction crossed the center line. I don't fully understand how we didn't collide head-on — I yanked the wheel, went partly into a ditch, and we clipped each other. My side of the car took the worst of it. Nobody died, which still feels unreal when I think about it. My collarbone and two ribs were broken, and I've been grinding through physical therapy ever since.

Here's the thing nobody warned me about: the driving part. I have to use that same road basically every day — school, groceries, my youngest's appointments. There's no real alternate route that's practical.

I did a few sessions with a therapist who specializes in trauma and it helped some. But last week a car drifted toward me on a curve and I completely lost it. Pulled into a church parking lot and just sat there shaking and crying for like 40 minutes. Couldn't call anyone because I couldn't even speak.

Every single time I get behind the wheel now my chest tightens, my hands go numb, and I feel like I might pass out. I white-knuckle the whole drive. By the time I get where I'm going I'm so drained I need to just sit quietly for ten minutes to decompress.

I know I'm lucky to be here. I know that. But I'm so exhausted by this invisible part of recovering that nobody really talks about.

Has anyone gotten through this? How long did it take? What actually helped? I just need some honest hope right now.

15replies

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15 replies

  • 22
    bright-owl-541

    Not legal advice at all, but I do want to mention — psychological injuries like PTSD and anxiety from crashes are real, compensable damages in most states. The driving terror you're describing, the therapy costs, the way this is affecting your daily functioning — those aren't soft or minor. If there's an open claim or you haven't fully settled yet, make sure whoever is handling your case knows the full picture of what you're going through emotionally, not just the physical injuries.

    • 4
      steady-traveler375

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 16
    quiet-owl-235

    I could have written this myself about 18 months ago. Rear-ended at highway speed, spun across two lanes. The physical stuff healed faster than I expected — the driving terror took SO much longer and honestly no one around me understood why I was still struggling months later. What helped me most was a therapist who did gradual exposure — like, we literally made a list from 'least scary road' to 'most scary road' and I worked up slowly over weeks. The day I drove the bad stretch alone and didn't cry felt bigger than finishing PT. You will get there. It's not linear, but you get there.

    • 23
      kind-wren-412

      What you're describing — the chest tightness, the shaking, the exhaustion afterward — that is your nervous system doing exactly what it was designed to do after a life-threatening event. It's not weakness, it's literally your brain trying to protect you. PTSD and trauma responses after serious crashes are genuinely underdiagnosed and undertreated. If you haven't specifically told your doctor about the driving symptoms (not just the physical injuries), please do. There are medication options that can take the edge off the acute panic response while you work through the deeper stuff in therapy. You deserve support for all of this, not just the broken bones.

    • 2
      curious-commuter479

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 15
    quiet-wolf-403

    Quick question — are you working with a therapist right now or did those sessions end? Because if you've only done a handful of sessions and then stopped, that might be part of why the second scary near-miss hit so hard. Ongoing support vs. a few one-off appointments can make a huge difference with this kind of thing.

  • 14
    gentle-heron-180

    I'm so sorry. Just reading this made my chest hurt for you. Please don't measure your recovery by anyone else's timeline. Four months sounds like a long time from the outside but honestly after something that traumatic? You're still so early. Be gentle with yourself. 💙

    • 8
      mellow-sidewalk454

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

    • 10
      calm-passenger380

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

  • 13
    clear-heron-947

    A few concrete things: (1) Ask your doctor specifically about beta blockers — they don't knock you out, they just blunt that physical panic spiral. Some people use them short-term during exposure therapy. (2) If the therapist you saw didn't specialize in accident-related PTSD specifically, find one who does. General trauma therapy and accident-specific trauma therapy aren't always the same. (3) Give yourself permission to take the long way sometimes. Protecting yourself while you heal isn't avoidance — it's pacing.

    • 5
      tired-neighbor322

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

  • 10
    keen-hare-615

    The fact that you're still getting in the car — even when it's terrifying, even when you end up in a parking lot for 40 minutes — honestly says so much about your resilience. You haven't given up on it. That matters more than it might feel like right now. A lot of people in your situation stop driving entirely and then the fear grows even bigger. You're fighting it every day even when it's awful.

    • 5
      hopeful-walker165

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

  • 10
    spry-beaver-250

    Piggybacking on the legal comment above — be really careful about settling anything before you fully understand how your mental health treatment is going to play out. Adjusters will push for a quick close and emotional/psychological damages are easy to minimize or miss entirely if you're not tracking them carefully. Document everything — therapy appointments, days you couldn't drive, times you had to ask someone else to take your kids. All of it.

    • 6
      honest-traveler984

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.