The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
Car accidentskind-heron-782

Got a scary crash, now random lawyers keep calling — and I feel weird about suing anyone

So I was in a pretty serious collision about two weeks ago. A truck ran a red light and T-boned me at a busy intersection. My car is basically totaled and I walked away with some neck stiffness and headaches that wouldn't quit. Went to urgent care, then ended up in the ER when the headaches got worse — they did a bunch of imaging and thankfully nothing showed up as serious. Gave me some meds and sent me home.

Here's the thing that's been messing with my head more than the actual crash:

Within like 24 hours I started getting calls from lawyers I never contacted. One of them told me I could potentially recover a really large amount and kept pushing me to sign something fast. It felt SO off. I looked it up and apparently this is a real thing — people somehow get your info after a crash and come running. I did eventually get one of them to stop contacting me after sending a written request.

But also — my own insurance mentioned I might want to pursue a claim against the other driver's policy. And honestly? My gut reaction was I don't want to take money from some random person. I just want my car replaced, my medical bills covered, and maybe a little cushion if my premiums go up.

Is that naive? Like am I thinking about this totally wrong? The other driver did blow a red light. I just feel strange about the whole "suing" framing even if I'm technically in the right.

Also my family was weirdly unsupportive through all of this which made it so much harder. Just grateful this community exists honestly.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    kind-crow-227

    I felt exactly the same way after my accident — almost guilty for even considering a claim. But here's what changed my mind: my 'minor' whiplash turned into months of physical therapy I did NOT see coming. The bills piled up fast. You're not taking money from a person, really — you're making a claim against an insurance policy that exists precisely for this situation. The other driver pays premiums so that when they cause a crash, this gets handled. That reframe helped me a lot.

    • 8
      sharp-crane-245

      The fact that your imaging came back clear is genuinely great news, but please keep tracking your symptoms over the next few weeks. Neck and shoulder issues after a T-bone can sometimes take time to fully declare themselves. If anything gets worse — numbness, shooting pain, headaches returning — go back in. Document everything with dates. This matters medically AND if you end up needing to show proof of injury later.

  • 13
    plain-dove-643

    Don't sign ANYTHING from those random lawyers who called you. Seriously, nothing. If you want actual representation, find someone yourself through a referral or a service you actually chose to use. And don't close out any claim with the insurance company until you're confident your symptoms are fully resolved. That's the main thing.

    • 5
      patient-neighbor300

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

  • 12
    keen-swan-954

    Please be really careful about those unsolicited lawyer calls. That's called ambulance chasing and it's sketchy at best, predatory at worst. Some of those 'firms' are just lead-generation mills that sell your case to someone else and take a cut. You have every right to ignore them or send a written cease-contact notice.

    • 13
      keen-grouse-826

      Quick question — when you say your insurance mentioned pursuing a claim, were they talking about your own uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage or the other driver's liability policy? That distinction actually matters a lot for how this plays out. Also did the other driver's insurance contact you directly yet? Just want to make sure you're not mixing up which company is saying what.

    • 5
      patient-passenger892

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 9
    quick-swan-399

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the framing of 'I don't want to take someone's money' is really common and also really understandable. Just know that a liability claim goes to the at-fault driver's insurer, not their personal bank account. What you're entitled to isn't generosity — it's the coverage that exists because the other driver was legally required to carry it. Whether you pursue more than bare minimums is 100% your call, but understanding the actual mechanics might help you decide with clear eyes.

    • 4
      kind-passenger862

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 8
    gentle-fox-161

    I used to work on the insurance side and I just want to be real with you — when adjusters hear 'I just want my car and basic bills covered,' they are relieved. That is the easiest, cheapest close for them. I'm not saying you need to go after a huge payout, but at minimum make sure ALL your medical costs are actually accounted for before you settle anything. Symptoms from crashes sometimes show up weeks later and once you settle, that's usually it.

  • 8
    kind-crane-172

    I'm really glad you're okay and that the scans came back fine 💙 I'm sorry your family wasn't more supportive — that part honestly sounded really lonely on top of an already stressful situation. You seem like a really thoughtful person for even questioning all of this. Take care of yourself first, the paperwork stuff can wait a little.

    • 10
      tired-passenger990

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?