The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Car accidentscandid-kestrel-250

Got rear-ended on the way to a job that literally requires me to drive. Timing couldn't be worse.

I don't even know where to start. I've been job hunting for months and finally landed an interview for a delivery route position — the kind where having a clean driving record and your own reliable vehicle is basically the whole application. Was maybe ten minutes away from the place when someone blew through a stop sign and tagged the back corner of my car pretty hard.

Airbags didn't go off but the impact was no joke. I sat there for a second just trying to figure out what happened. The other driver was apologetic, we exchanged info, police came and wrote it up. I ended up calling ahead and explaining the situation — they were actually understanding and rescheduled me, which I'm grateful for.

Physically I think I'm okay? My shoulder and the left side of my neck are sore in that way that makes you wonder if it'll be nothing tomorrow or something worse in three days. The seatbelt definitely did its job but wow does it leave a mark. No ER visit, just went home and iced everything.

Now I'm stressed on like four different levels:

  • Will my car get fixed fast enough to matter for this job?
  • Should I see a doctor even if I feel "mostly fine"?
  • Do I just deal with the other driver's insurance or is that a trap?
  • And honestly... is this just bad luck or am I missing something I should be doing right now?

I know it could've been way worse and nobody got seriously hurt. But I'm still shaken and I'd love to hear from people who've been through something similar. What did you wish you'd done in the first 48 hours?

13replies

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13 replies

  • 16
    calm-swift-532

    The 'mostly fine' feeling is what got me too. I felt fine the night of my accident and woke up two days later barely able to turn my head. Please go get checked out even if it feels unnecessary — soft tissue stuff can sneak up on you hard, and having it documented early matters a lot if it turns into something.

  • 15
    quick-crane-735

    Seconding the 'go get seen' advice so much. Adrenaline is wild — it genuinely masks pain for hours, sometimes longer. Neck and shoulder soreness after an impact like you're describing is worth a same-day urgent care visit at minimum. They'll check range of motion, maybe do imaging if anything feels off. And honestly, having a medical record from right after the accident protects you in ways you might not think about yet. Don't wait until it gets worse to make it 'worth' going.

    • 2
      soft-spoken-co-pilot838

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

  • 17
    clear-vole-713

    Do NOT give the other driver's insurance a recorded statement before you know what your injuries actually are. They will call you within a day or two sounding super friendly and helpful, and anything you say about feeling 'okay' gets used to minimize your claim later. You don't have to be hostile, just tell them you're still being evaluated and you'll follow up.

  • 10
    genuine-lynx-821

    Jumping in to back that up — I used to work claims and early recorded statements were genuinely one of the most useful tools we had for limiting payouts. It's not malicious exactly, it's just the system. If you say 'I feel mostly fine' on day two and then you're in PT for six weeks, that recording becomes a problem for you. There's no deadline forcing you to do it immediately. Take your time.

    • 12
      curious-sparrow-936

      A few practical things worth doing right now if you haven't already: take photos of all vehicle damage (yours AND theirs), screenshot or save the police report number, and write down everything you remember about how the accident happened while it's fresh — speeds, weather, exactly what you were doing. Even a voice memo works. That kind of contemporaneous detail is surprisingly useful later and people always forget things faster than they expect.

    • 0
      calm-optimist566

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

  • 12
    quick-heron-981

    On the job front — just be honest with them about what happened. You already rescheduled once and they were cool about it. If your car needs a few days in the shop, most employers for that kind of role have seen this stuff before. What they won't be cool with is you showing up to start a driving job with an unreported injury that sidelines you week one.

    • 19
      quiet-dove-242

      Not legal advice, but the combination of documented fault on the other driver plus physical symptoms — even mild ones — plus economic impact like potential job complications is exactly the kind of thing worth at least a free consultation over. Most PI attorneys don't charge for that initial call. You don't have to commit to anything, but knowing your options before you start talking numbers with the other insurer is smart.

    • 8
      careful-commuter397

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 5
    careful-fox-782

    I'm really sorry this happened to you, especially right when things were finally looking up with the job search. That's just awful timing and it makes total sense that you're shaken. Please take care of yourself first — the logistics will sort out, but your body is the thing that actually can't wait.

    • 16
      calm-fox-819

      Okay hear me out — you handled this really well. You stayed calm, got the police report, kept it together enough to call the employer and they RESCHEDULED. That's not nothing. You're clearly thinking clearly under pressure, which is honestly a quality a driving job would want. This is a setback, not the end of the road.

    • 10
      gentle-wanderer195

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.