The Shoulder
The Shoulder
74
calm-sparrow-751

Got sideswiped out of nowhere yesterday — I thought I knew what crashes were like. I didn't.

I've seen probably hundreds of crash clips online. Compilations, dashcam fails, the whole thing. I genuinely thought I had some kind of mental model for what it would feel like. I was so wrong.

Yesterday my roommate was driving us back from a hardware store run. We were on a four-lane road I've been on a hundred times. Out of nowhere a sedan drifted across the center line — we think he was looking at his phone — and caught us on the front quarter panel on my side. The impact was nothing like I imagined. There was no dramatic slow motion. It was just: normal world, then chaos, then we were facing a completely different direction and there was glass dust in the air and my ears were ringing.

The airbags didn't deploy but the door on my side buckled pretty bad. I remember trying to figure out if I was okay and genuinely not being able to tell. My neck felt fine in the moment, which apparently means nothing — by the time we got to urgent care two hours later I could barely turn my head to the left.

The other driver was apologetic but that's pretty much all he said. We exchanged info. A woman who had stopped to help actually reminded us to take photos before either car moved, which I would have completely forgotten.

Now I'm home, icing my neck, and feeling weirdly shaky and emotional about something that happened yesterday. My roommate is fine physically but also kind of rattled.

Has anyone else felt that delayed emotional crash after the adrenaline wears off? And did anyone else get told at urgent care to 'wait and see' on imaging? That part is stressing me out.

13replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

13 replies

  • 21
    kind-swan-149

    Not legal advice, but the combination of a clear liability situation (documented lane departure), soft tissue injury, and an ongoing medical picture is exactly the kind of case where people benefit from at least a consultation before they engage with the other driver's insurer directly. Many PI attorneys do free consults. The 'wait and see' on imaging is also worth pushing back on with your doctor if symptoms worsen — documented imaging is important if you ever need to demonstrate the injury. Hope you feel better soon.

    • 5
      patient-rider916

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

    • 8
      level-mile-marker875

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 19
    genuine-owl-416

    I used to work claims and I want to second what others are saying about recorded statements. Early ones are gold for the insurance company because victims haven't had time to fully assess their injuries. If you say 'my neck is a little sore' on day one and then need physical therapy for three months, that early statement gets pulled out. Also — and I can't stress this enough — get that urgent care visit and any follow-up visits documented thoroughly. Gaps in medical care are the number one thing adjusters use to argue injuries weren't that serious.

    • 8
      careful-sparrow-501

      A few practical things worth doing right now while it's fresh: write out everything you remember about the accident in as much detail as possible — the direction of travel, what you saw, what you felt, the sequence. Text it to yourself or email it so it's timestamped. Also pull together the photos you took, the other driver's info, and any witness names if you got them. If you end up needing to pursue a claim, that documentation is really valuable and memories fade fast.

  • 17
    curious-vole-664

    The delayed shaking is so real. After my accident I held it together at the scene, handled everything, got home — and then just completely fell apart on my couch. Like my body finally decided it was safe enough to freak out. It's a totally normal response to trauma, even if it feels weird because the danger is already over. Give yourself grace for the next few days.

    • 16
      steady-vole-940

      One thing I'd flag: when the other driver's insurance calls you — and they will, probably soon — they're going to be super friendly and it's going to feel like they just want to help sort everything out. They are not on your side. Be really careful about giving a recorded statement before you know the full extent of your injuries. You can politely decline or say you need more time. Anything you say early can be used to minimize your claim later.

    • 0
      level-road-soul286

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 16
    bold-owl-187

    I just want to say I'm really glad you and your roommate are okay. That sounds genuinely terrifying and you're allowed to feel shaken. Please rest tonight and don't try to push through it.

    • 19
      curious-elk-908

      You had a stranger stop and remind you to photograph the scene. That one moment of kindness from someone who owed you nothing probably saved you a significant headache down the road. People are good sometimes. I hope your recovery is smooth and faster than you're expecting.

  • 16
    careful-crane-475

    Did the police come to the scene? And was a report filed? I ask because if this goes to an insurance claim or anything further, having an official report that names the other driver as crossing the center line is a big deal. If there's no report, it's just your word against his on what actually happened.

  • 14
    mellow-stoat-959

    Don't settle anything with insurance until you're actually done treating. That's the main thing. A lot of people accept an offer because they feel okay after a few weeks and then problems show up later and they've already signed a release. Know your treatment timeline before you agree to anything.

  • 13
    steady-sparrow-875

    Please don't let the 'wait and see' thing go too long with your neck. Soft tissue injuries from lateral impacts can take 24-72 hours to fully declare themselves, and whiplash in particular can be deceptive early on. If you wake up tomorrow with significantly more stiffness or any tingling/numbness into your arms or hands, don't wait — go back in or go to an ER. I'm not saying panic, just don't dismiss it because you felt 'okay-ish' right after. Document every symptom you notice, even ones that seem minor.