The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Legal questionssteady-grouse-150

Got rear-ended at a stoplight, neck won't stop aching — do I even need a lawyer?

So this happened a few weeks ago and I'm still kind of processing it all. I was sitting at a red light, completely stopped, when someone plowed into the back of my car. Wasn't my fault at all — the other driver even admitted it to the cops on scene.

I felt okay-ish right after, maybe a little shaken, but within a couple days I started noticing this dull ache spreading across the back of my neck and upper shoulders. Now it's constant. Some days it's manageable, other days I can barely turn my head to check my blind spot while driving. The worst part is bumps — every pothole or uneven railroad crossing sends a jolt through my whole upper back. It's been affecting my sleep too.

I went to urgent care and they said soft tissue stuff, gave me some anti-inflammatories, and told me to follow up with my regular doctor. I have an appointment next week.

The other driver's insurance has already called me twice being super friendly and asking me to give a recorded statement. Something about that feels off to me?

I guess my question is — is this even worth getting a lawyer involved? It's not like I have a broken bone or anything dramatic. I don't want to be that person who makes a huge deal out of nothing, but I also can't do my job properly right now because I'm on my feet all day and the pain is real.

Has anyone been through something similar? What did you do?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 18
    quiet-elk-893

    Please do NOT give that recorded statement. That "super friendly" call is them building a file to minimize your payout later. Anything you say can and will be used to lowball you. Soft tissue injuries are exactly the kind of thing they love to dismiss early and then you're stuck with medical bills months down the road. At minimum talk to someone before you call them back.

    • 14
      cool-dove-960

      The symptom pattern you're describing — delayed onset, pain that spikes with vibration or sudden movement — is really common with whiplash-type injuries. Soft tissue damage can take weeks to fully declare itself, which is exactly why you shouldn't rush to settle anything. Make sure your doctor documents everything at your appointment next week. Don't downplay it in the office just because you're tough. Tell them about the sleep disruption, the driving issues, all of it.

    • 8
      weary-wanderer652

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 17
    wise-seal-780

    A few practical things: keep a daily pain journal starting today — even just a few sentences about how you feel, what you couldn't do, how your sleep was. Save every receipt related to the accident, including mileage to doctor appointments. And don't post about this on any social media. Those records matter more than people realize once a claim moves forward.

    • 10
      mellow-otter-651

      You're definitely not making a huge deal out of nothing — chronic neck pain that messes with your sleep and your job is a real, serious thing. Please don't let the insurance company's friendliness fool you into thinking they're on your side. Take care of yourself first and figure out the legal stuff with someone who knows what they're doing. You deserve to actually recover from this.

  • 15
    wise-lynx-129

    Not trying to be harsh, but a few questions that'll matter: Did you get checked out at the scene or right after? Is there a police report that clearly documents the other driver at fault? Are you actually going to follow through with the doctor next week? I ask because the strength of what you can claim depends heavily on a consistent medical paper trail from the very beginning. Gaps in treatment are the first thing insurers point to.

    • 7
      level-late-shift671

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

  • 12
    clever-crane-797

    I went through almost the exact same thing — rear-ended, felt fine at the scene, then two days later I could barely get out of bed. I made the mistake of thinking it wasn't serious enough for a lawyer and handled it myself. The settlement I got didn't come close to covering my physical therapy. Honestly, even a free consultation with a PI attorney costs you nothing and at least you'll know where you stand.

    • 9
      swift-fox-538

      I used to work on the insurance side. When an adjuster calls you that fast and that warmly, there's a reason. They want to lock in your story before your symptoms fully develop and before you lawyer up. Soft tissue claims without representation almost always settle for less — sometimes a lot less. I'm not saying that to scare you, just being honest about how the process actually works from the inside.

    • 0
      grounded-sidewalk379

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 10
    steady-finch-150

    Not legal advice, but: the fact that there's no broken bone doesn't mean your claim isn't valid or valuable. Ongoing pain that affects your ability to work and sleep is exactly what personal injury claims are designed to address. Most PI attorneys work on contingency so there's no upfront cost to you. At minimum, a free consultation will help you understand your options before you agree to anything with the other driver's insurer.

  • 9
    cool-sparrow-398

    You're on your feet all day for work and right now you can't do that properly. That's lost wages and potential future medical costs on the table. Don't settle this yourself. Just don't.