The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentswarm-finch-322

I was eerily calm during my crash and now I can't stop thinking about why

So this happened a few weeks ago and I'm physically recovering fine, but something keeps nagging at me mentally and I don't know who to talk to about it.

I got hit pretty hard — T-bone situation, airbags deployed, the whole thing. By any measure it was a serious wreck. But the second it was over I just... switched into this weird autopilot mode. I turned off my ignition, assessed my body, checked on my passenger, and started flagging down help — all without my heart rate seeming to go above like 60 bpm.

The other driver was audibly panicking. My passenger was crying. People who ran over to help looked shaken up. And I'm just standing there calmly answering questions like I'm ordering coffee.

I even remember — and this is the part that gets me — in the half-second before impact I actually thought through how to brace. Like my brain just quietly did the math.

Paramedics showed up and I kept redirecting them to check on other people first because I genuinely felt fine. They looked at me kind of sideways about it.

It's been weeks now and I haven't cried, haven't had nightmares, nothing. But I also feel kind of... numb? Disconnected? Like I'm watching my own life on a slight delay.

Is this a normal trauma response? Did anyone else go full robot-mode during their accident and then feel weird about it afterward? I'm starting to wonder if the emotional stuff is just quietly waiting to ambush me later.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 11
    quiet-newt-022

    Oh wow, this is almost exactly what happened to me after my accident two years ago. I was so calm on scene that a bystander literally asked if I was in shock. I wasn't — or at least I didn't feel like it. The disconnect you're describing though? That hit me hard about three weeks later out of nowhere. I'd be driving somewhere totally normal and just start shaking. Your nervous system is doing something, it's just doing it on its own schedule. Please don't let anyone convince you that 'calm = fine.'

    • 8
      quiet-walker980

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

    • 0
      plainspoken-road-soul613

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 17
    clear-stoat-845

    What you're describing sounds a lot like an acute stress response — and the calm, clear-headed version of it is actually really common, just not talked about as much as the panicky version. Your brain essentially flooded with adrenaline and cortisol and went into pure task-mode. The 'numb and on a delay' feeling you're having now is worth paying attention to though. That can be early dissociation, which isn't dangerous on its own, but it can be your nervous system's way of saying 'I still haven't processed this.' Seriously consider talking to someone — even just a few sessions with a therapist who does trauma work. You don't have to be falling apart to deserve that kind of support.

    • 6
      silent-stoat-915

      The fact that you're asking this question tells me you know something is off, even if you can't name it. Please don't brush past this just because you're not outwardly struggling. Reach out to someone you trust in real life too, okay?

  • 10
    daring-wolf-059

    Not trying to dismiss what you're feeling, but I'm curious — have you had any high-stress experiences before this? Military, emergency work, even just a chaotic upbringing? Some people are genuinely wired to compartmentalize under pressure and it's not always a red flag. The numbness afterward is the part I'd watch more closely than the calm during.

  • 17
    silent-vole-260

    I know it feels unsettling, but honestly? Your composure probably helped keep the scene calmer for everyone else there. You redirected help to people who needed it, you didn't make the situation worse, and you kept your head. That's not nothing. The emotional processing can still come — and if it does, you'll handle that too.

    • 4
      curious-rider527

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

    • 0
      thankful-late-shift650

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.

  • 11
    careful-vole-098

    The delayed reaction is real and it sneaks up on you. Document how you're feeling now — physically AND mentally — as consistently as you can. If this ends up in any kind of insurance or legal situation, psychological impact from an accident is absolutely part of your damages, and 'I felt fine at first but then...' is an incredibly common and legitimate pattern. Don't let early calm make you think you have no case for what comes after.

  • 14
    bright-seal-413

    Not legal advice, but — the emotional and psychological aftermath of a serious accident is compensable in most states, including delayed-onset anxiety, PTSD symptoms, or adjustment disorders. The fact that you weren't visibly distressed at the scene doesn't waive any of that. If you haven't spoken with a personal injury attorney yet, it's worth at least a free consultation before you sign anything with an insurer. Many people don't realize they can include mental health treatment costs in a claim.

  • 14
    genuine-finch-929

    If you talk to an adjuster and mention you felt 'calm and fine' right after the accident, they will absolutely use that against you later if you develop symptoms. I'd be really careful about what you say to insurance people at this stage — they are building a file, not having a friendly conversation.