The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentstidy-sparrow-012

Got rear-ended an hour ago. Car's driveable but I can't stop shaking — is this normal?

I'm sitting in a parking lot right now trying to calm down and I just found this forum on my phone. Got hit from behind at a red light maybe 90 minutes ago. The other driver stopped, we exchanged info, I even managed to call my insurance. Physically I think I'm okay — little sore in my neck but nothing feels broken.

But my hands won't stop trembling. Like genuinely shaking. And I keep replaying the sound of the impact over and over. I started crying in front of the other driver which was mortifying. Pulled into this lot to collect myself and I just... can't.

I know the practical stuff is handled for now. I'm not asking about claims or lawyers right now.

I just want to know — does this physical shaking and emotional crash go away? Has anyone else felt like this right after? What did you actually DO in those first few hours to feel more like a human again?

My husband is on his way but he's 45 minutes out. I feel so alone sitting here and weirdly embarrassed that I'm this shaken up over something that could have been so much worse. Any words would really help right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 19
    warm-crow-094

    The shaking is SO normal. Your body just flooded itself with adrenaline and now it's burning it off — that's literally what the trembling is. When I got hit last year I sat in a Walgreens parking lot for almost two hours because I couldn't trust my legs. Let it happen. Don't fight it or feel embarrassed. You're not being dramatic, your nervous system just went through something scary.

  • 8
    spry-raven-838

    Oh honey, please don't be embarrassed. Crying in front of a stranger after a crash is one of the most human things imaginable. I'm glad your husband is coming. Can you call or text a friend right now just to have a voice on the line while you wait? You shouldn't have to sit there alone with your thoughts.

    • 14
      sharp-badger-862

      Clinically what you're experiencing is an acute stress response — totally expected after a sudden trauma, even a 'minor' one. A few things that genuinely help: slow your exhale down (breathe in for 4 counts, out for 6-8). That activates your parasympathetic nervous system and starts dialing down the adrenaline. Also, if you have any snacks in the car, eat something small — blood sugar crashes after an adrenaline spike and it makes the emotional spiral way worse. And stay warm if you can. Shock makes people cold.

    • 9
      brave-lynx-083

      You handled the scene like a champ — exchanged info, called insurance, got yourself safely off the road. A lot of people freeze and can't do any of that. The shaking means your body did its job protecting you. Now it just needs to power down. You're already through the hard part.

  • 18
    spry-badger-015

    Don't drive again until the shaking fully stops. Seriously. When your husband gets there, let him drive you home even if you think you're fine. Reaction time is garbage after an adrenaline crash. That's not fear talking, it's just physics.

    • 2
      tired-commuter789

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

    • 1
      restless-co-pilot843

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

  • 12
    gentle-otter-918

    Also — and I wish someone had told me this — the emotional weirdness doesn't always peak right away. I felt okay-ish the night of my accident and then woke up at 3am having a full panic attack. If you find yourself jumpy, having trouble sleeping, or flinching at brake lights over the next week or two, that's really common. Doesn't mean something is wrong with you. Just means you went through something. Be patient with yourself.

    • 4
      calm-optimist479

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

  • 17
    bright-mole-255

    You said your neck is sore — please don't brush that off just because you feel mostly okay right now. Adrenaline masks pain really effectively. I'm not trying to stress you out more, genuinely just asking: are you planning to get checked out tonight or tomorrow? Even urgent care is worth it just to have it documented.

  • 13
    plain-stoat-692

    Not trying to drag you into logistics mode when you're still shaking, but one small thing that's actually calming for some people: just start a voice memo on your phone and narrate what happened while it's fresh. You don't have to do anything with it. It gives your brain something concrete to focus on AND it ends up being useful later. Helped me feel less powerless after my accident.