The Shoulder
The Shoulder
67
Car accidentswise-tern-310

First accident ever and someone blew a stop sign and hit me broadside. I'm a mess.

I honestly don't even know where to start. I've been driving for over a decade and never so much as a fender bender, and then yesterday afternoon on my way home from a completely normal Tuesday at work, some guy in a pickup just blew right through a stop sign and hit me dead on the passenger side. I had zero time to react.

Ambulance took me to the ER. Spent hours there. They did X-rays and a CT scan and I'm leaving with a soft tissue injury in my upper back, some rib bruising, and a partying headache that won't quit. The doctor mentioned whiplash as well.

The car situation is what's making me want to cry every time I think about it. I literally just paid it off — like two months ago. First time in my adult life I owned a vehicle free and clear, and now it's sitting in some tow yard looking like a crushed soda can.

The other driver's insurance has already called me once and I didn't answer because I genuinely don't know what I'm supposed to say or do. The police report clearly shows he had the stop sign. Witnesses stayed and gave statements.

I feel so blindsided (no pun intended). Has anyone been through something like this? What did you do first? What should I not do? I'm still in that foggy shock mode where nothing feels real yet and I don't want to make a mistake that hurts me later.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 22
    clear-seal-710

    A few practical things that matter a lot early on:

    1. Request a copy of the police report as soon as it's available — usually a few days after the incident. 2. Document everything — photos of your car, screenshots of any messages, names and badge numbers of officers at the scene if you got them. 3. Keep a daily journal of how you feel physically. Even just two or three sentences a day. It sounds tedious but it creates a record of how your symptoms progress or change over time, which matters more than people realize.

    Not telling you what to do legally, just stuff that tends to be useful later.

    • 5
      curious-driver764

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

  • 19
    warm-bison-327

    Oh man, I felt this post in my bones. Almost the exact same thing happened to me — T-boned at an intersection, clear police report in my favor, and the other driver's insurance calling me within like 18 hours. I picked up that first call and honestly wish I hadn't. They were super friendly but kept asking me to describe how I felt physically, and I didn't realize I was basically giving a recorded statement. Don't do that until you have a better handle on your injuries. Soft tissue stuff especially can get way worse over the next few days.

    • 19
      tidy-finch-737

      Former adjuster here and yeah, that early outreach is a standard move. The faster they can get you to accept a quick settlement or make statements downplaying your injuries, the better for them. With witnesses and a police report on your side you're actually in a decent position — don't let them rush you into anything. Also, get every medical record and receipt from the ER before you do anything else. Start a folder, physical or digital, and put everything in it.

    • 0
      weary-survivor867

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

  • 17
    tidy-fox-343

    Here's the short version: don't talk to the other driver's insurance without understanding your rights first, see your doctor again in the next few days even if you feel "fine," and get your car's damage assessed in writing. You have a strong position here — witnesses, a clear report, and you sought medical care immediately. Don't give that away by rushing.

    • 4
      patient-rider162

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 17
    clear-otter-865

    Not legal advice, but as a general matter — when liability is pretty clearly established via a police report and witness statements, the main thing that can hurt a claim is gaps in medical care or recorded statements made before you fully understand your injuries. Soft tissue and whiplash injuries are often underestimated early and can have real lasting effects. Worth at least having a free consultation with a PI attorney before you respond to the other carrier. Most won't charge you anything to talk.

    • 5
      hopeful-parent388

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 10
    clear-dove-010

    Please don't ignore the headache or write it off as stress. With a CT involved they probably cleared you for anything serious, but post-concussive symptoms and whiplash effects can take days to fully show up. If that headache gets worse, or you get any dizziness, vision changes, or neck stiffness that increases — go back in. Also rib bruising is no joke comfort-wise, so stay on top of whatever pain management they recommended and don't try to tough it out.

    • 5
      kind-parent225

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 10
    genuine-marten-908

    I'm so sorry. The shock you're describing is so real. Even when you're physically okay-ish, something like this just rattles your whole sense of safety. Be gentle with yourself this week. Is there someone who can be with you or at least check in on you? You shouldn't be navigating all of this alone while you're still in that fog.

    • 5
      warm-stoat-039

      I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but you actually did several things right — you called 911, you went to the ER, witnesses stayed. A lot of people don't do those things and it really complicates their situation later. You've got a solid foundation to work from even if everything feels chaotic right now. Hang in there.

  • 7
    keen-kestrel-389

    Do NOT call that insurance company back on your own yet. I cannot stress this enough. They are not calling to help you — they're calling to get you on record saying something like "I'm sore but okay" so they can minimize your claim later. They are very good at this. You don't owe them a friendly conversation right now.