The Shoulder
The Shoulder
69
Property damagekeen-fox-153

Fell asleep driving home after a double shift — totaled my car and I'm still shaking

I don't even really know why I'm posting this. I think I just need to get it out somewhere.

So about three weeks ago I was driving home after pulling back-to-back shifts at my warehouse job — I'm talking close to 16 hours on my feet. It was somewhere around 3 in the morning. The drive is only about 45 minutes, all interstate, and I kept telling myself just stay on the road, you're almost there.

I remember rolling the window down. I remember turning the music up. I remember thinking I was fine.

I was not fine.

I woke up to the sound of gravel under my tires and my car already half off the road. I overcorrected hard — rookie mistake — and the car whipped across two lanes before slamming into the concrete barrier on the opposite side. Airbags, glass, the whole thing. I just sat there in the wreck not understanding what had happened for probably a full minute.

A trucker who'd been behind me pulled over and called 911. I genuinely think he saved my life by staying close enough to get help there fast.

The car is a complete loss. I walked away with a pretty bad shoulder injury, some bruised ribs, and a concussion that's still giving me headaches three weeks later. No other vehicles were involved, thank god.

Here's where I'm stuck: this happened because my employer had me scheduled in a way that made it basically impossible to get home safely. Is that on me entirely? Is there any conversation to be had about employer responsibility here? My medical bills are already piling up and I have no idea where to even start.

Has anyone dealt with something like this?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 19
    plain-sparrow-433

    First — really glad you're alive. I fell asleep at the wheel a couple years ago under similar circumstances, nothing nearly as bad as yours, but I know that shaky hollow feeling afterward that just doesn't go away. Be gentle with yourself right now. The fact that you're asking questions and thinking about next steps means you're going to get through this.

  • 14
    keen-newt-009

    Not legal advice, but the employer angle you're raising is actually something attorneys who handle these cases do look at sometimes. There are circumstances — particularly when an employer's scheduling practices or mandatory overtime creates a foreseeable risk of harm — where liability conversations can get complicated. Worth at least having a free consultation with a PI attorney to talk through the facts. Most won't charge you anything just to listen. Don't wait too long though; evidence and documentation matters early.

  • 16
    bold-dove-328

    Please be careful what you say to any insurance adjuster right now. Even your own. They will ask leading questions and anything you say about being tired, knowing you were drowsy, rolling the window down to stay awake — all of that can get used to frame this as entirely your fault and minimize what they pay out. Talk to someone who's on YOUR side before you give a recorded statement.

    • 0
      honest-neighbor482

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

  • 18
    keen-vole-160

    The fact that you're still getting headaches three weeks post-concussion is something you really need to stay on top of. Please make sure a doctor is actually tracking that — not just the ER visit, but follow-up care. Post-concussion syndrome can drag on and affect your work, your sleep, your mood, and if it's not documented consistently it becomes really hard to connect to the accident later. Keep every appointment, keep notes on your symptoms.

  • 10
    patient-owl-714

    Worked in claims for years. The employer liability angle is real but it's complicated — it usually hinges on whether you were on the clock or considered to be in a work-related activity at the time of the crash. Driving home after a shift typically isn't covered under workers' comp in most states, but there are exceptions depending on how your employment is structured. That said, I've seen attorneys build creative arguments around employer negligence in scheduling. Don't rule it out without talking to someone qualified.

  • 17
    brave-lynx-092

    I'm so sorry. I honestly teared up reading this. You rolled the window down and turned the music up — you were trying so hard to get home safe. Please don't be too hard on yourself. You were a kid trying to do the right thing for your job and your body just gave out. That's not a character flaw, that's biology. Wishing you a full recovery 💙

  • 5
    swift-heron-058

    Three things: document everything now while it's fresh — write down your full schedule leading up to the crash, every shift, every hour. Get all your medical records and bills organized in one place. And stop talking to insurance companies without knowing your rights first. You can sort out the moral questions about fault later; right now just protect yourself practically.

    • 2
      weathered-co-pilot614

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 22
    mellow-elk-325

    I'm not trying to be harsh because I'm genuinely glad you're okay — but I'm curious what you mean by 'scheduled in a way that made it basically impossible to get home safely.' Were you required to work those hours, or did you pick up the extra shift voluntarily? And was there any policy at your job about safe transportation after long shifts? Those details matter a lot if you're thinking about pointing a finger at your employer.

    • 7
      quiet-commuter678

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