The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
keen-marten-096

Got hit from behind on the freeway 2 days ago and I can't stop shaking

I don't really know why I'm posting this here. I guess I just need somewhere to put it.

Two days ago I was heading into work, totally normal Tuesday morning. Traffic on the interstate slowed down fast — construction zone or something — and I braked. The car behind me didn't. He hit me so hard I spun partially into the next lane before coming to a stop against the median barrier.

The airbags went off. I remember the sound more than anything. Like a gunshot. And then this weird chemical smell and just... silence for a second before I started realizing what happened.

Physically I got off pretty lucky — some neck stiffness and what the urgent care doc called a mild whiplash strain. Nothing broken. I know that's good. I know that.

But mentally I'm a wreck. Last night I maybe slept two hours total. Every time I started drifting off I'd jolt awake with this wave of panic, like it was happening again. I keep replaying it. I keep thinking — what if the angle had been slightly different? What if my kid had been in the back seat like she is on weekends?

I drove to work this morning and my hands were white-knuckling the wheel the whole way. Every car that merged near me made my heart jump into my throat.

I did nothing wrong. I know that too. I was just driving. And somehow that makes it worse — like there's no lesson to take from it, no adjustment I can make to guarantee it won't happen again.

Has anyone else felt this way after a crash? Does the hypervigilance ever go away? I'm not even worried about the insurance stuff right now, I just want to feel normal again.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 18
    sharp-badger-876

    Not legal advice, but just so you know — what you're describing (sleep disruption, anxiety, intrusive thoughts following a collision caused by another driver) can absolutely be part of a personal injury claim. Pain and suffering isn't only physical. A lot of people don't realize that. Worth at least a free consult when you're ready, just to understand your options. Right now though, just take care of yourself.

    • 3
      curious-optimist218

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 19
    plain-newt-964

    The white-knuckling will ease up. Your brain is doing exactly what it's designed to do — trying to protect you from the thing that just hurt you. It's annoying and exhausting but it's not permanent. Give yourself at least two weeks before you decide it's a 'forever' problem.

    • 3
      weathered-backseat888

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 18
    careful-crow-383

    The fact that you're already back behind the wheel, that you went to work this morning — that's actually huge. A lot of people can't do that right away. You're stronger than you're giving yourself credit for, even if it doesn't feel that way right now.

  • 7
    clever-crow-074

    Did the urgent care do any imaging or just a physical exam? Asking because whiplash symptoms can sometimes be a lot more than they seem in the first 48 hours — the inflammation hasn't fully set in yet. I'd push for at least an X-ray if they didn't do one, and maybe follow up with your regular doctor in a week.

  • 7
    brave-raven-476

    Yes. All of this, yes. I went through almost the exact same thing after a rear-end collision two years ago. The jolting awake at night lasted about two weeks for me, and the driving anxiety was rough for probably six weeks. It does get better, I promise — but it doesn't just disappear on its own. What helped me most was talking to someone, like an actual therapist, even just a few sessions. Don't tough it out if you don't have to.

    • 10
      patient-otter-911

      I know you said you're not worried about the insurance stuff yet, and that's fair — focus on you right now. Just one thing though: make sure you document everything you're feeling, including the sleep problems and the anxiety. Keep a little daily journal, even just a few sentences. If you end up making a claim, emotional and psychological impact matters and is way easier to show if you wrote it down at the time versus trying to reconstruct it months later.

  • 14
    kind-raven-875

    What you're describing — the hypervigilance, the intrusive replays, the sleep disruption — those are really classic acute stress responses and they make complete physiological sense after a traumatic event. Your nervous system basically got a massive shock and it's still in threat-detection mode.

    The good news is that for most people this settles significantly within a few weeks. The thing to watch for is if it's not improving after three or four weeks, or if it gets worse — that's when it can tip into PTSD territory and you'd really benefit from professional support. Don't dismiss the mental side of this just because your physical injuries are 'minor.' Trauma is trauma.

  • 8
    warm-badger-638

    I just want to say — please don't minimize what you went through because you walked away. You were in a serious crash. Your brain went through something scary. Be gentle with yourself this week, okay? Let yourself be shaken up.