The Shoulder
The Shoulder
65
Car accidentsswift-finch-319

Had my first real crash yesterday and I honestly can't stop shaking

I don't really have anyone in my life who gets it so I'm just going to word-vomit this here. Hope that's okay.

I was a passenger when we got T-boned at an intersection yesterday afternoon. The whole thing lasted maybe two seconds but it felt like a movie glitch — like reality just skipped a frame. One second we're talking about where to eat lunch, and then suddenly there's this wall of noise and everything is sideways and there's smoke or dust or something in the air that smells like burning plastic and chalk mixed together.

Neither of us had serious injuries, which still doesn't feel real. I keep touching my arms and shoulders like I'm checking. There's a bruise across my chest from the seatbelt and my neck is stiff today, but I walked away. The car did not.

What I wasn't prepared for is the after. Like everyone kept saying "you're fine, you're lucky" and yeah, I know. But my hands won't totally stop trembling. I keep replaying the sound. I got in my roommate's car to grab dinner tonight and I white-knuckled the door handle the whole ride.

I also have zero idea what I'm supposed to do next. The driver exchanged info with the other person. There's a police report. But beyond that I'm kind of lost — do I need to file anything myself? Do I see a doctor even if nothing feels broken? Does the stiff neck matter?

Anyway. Just needed to say it out loud somewhere. Thanks for being here, whoever you are. Drive safe out there.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    mellow-tern-424

    Just a heads up — if an adjuster from either insurance company calls you, you don't have to give a recorded statement right away. They'll make it sound routine and urgent, but you have every right to say you're not ready. Early recorded statements have a way of getting used against people later. Don't let anyone rush you.

  • 19
    careful-sparrow-563

    As a passenger you're generally in a pretty clear position — you didn't cause the accident, so fault isn't really pointed at you. Whether you have a claim worth pursuing depends on your injuries and medical costs, which is why getting checked out now actually matters legally too, not just medically. Not legal advice, just context.

  • 18
    clever-raven-345

    You walked away. I know it doesn't make the shaking stop, but that matters. And the fact that you're already asking the right questions — doctor, next steps, what to file — means you're going to handle this okay. You've got this.

    • 2
      grounded-offramp720

      Saving this whole thread. Really appreciate the honesty here.

  • 16
    warm-crow-006

    Please don't brush off the stiff neck. Soft tissue injuries from crashes — especially whiplash-type stuff — can feel minor in the first 24 hours and then ramp up significantly on day two or three once inflammation sets in. I'd genuinely recommend seeing a doctor or urgent care tomorrow just to get it documented and checked out. Not being dramatic, just — it's worth the hour of your time.

    • 2
      steady-walker411

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 9
    wise-fox-095

    I'm so glad you're okay. Seriously. And I just want to say — posting this somewhere to get it out of your head was actually a really healthy instinct. Don't let anyone tell you you're overreacting. A crash is a crash, big or small.

  • 9
    steady-elk-362

    Three things: see a doctor tomorrow, get the police report number, and don't post about this on any social media. That's it. Everything else can wait until you've slept.

  • 8
    calm-beaver-834

    The documentation piece matters more than most people realize early on. Even if you were just a passenger, you may have a claim depending on how fault shakes out. A few practical things: get a copy of the police report, take photos of any bruising (including that seatbelt mark), and write down everything you remember while it's fresh — time, what you saw, what the other driver said. If you do end up with medical bills or ongoing neck issues, that paper trail is everything.

  • 6
    wise-wren-981

    The shaking after is so real and nobody warns you about it. I was in a rear-end collision two years ago and felt completely fine physically but couldn't sleep for three days. Your nervous system just went through something intense — give yourself permission to feel off for a bit. It does get better.

    • 1
      curious-parent494

      How long did it end up taking in your case?