The Shoulder
The Shoulder
46
curious-tern-810

I have zero memory of the scene — did I act awful to the people who saved me?

This is probably a strange thing to be anxious about, but it's been eating at me and I figure if anywhere is the right place to bring it up, it's here.

I was in a really bad wreck a few months back. My last clear memory is leaving a friend's place that evening. My next memory is being in a hospital bed with my family around me, and days had passed. I genuinely did not know I'd been in an accident until someone told me.

Here's the thing — my brother told me recently that I was apparently conscious and talking when first responders got to me. I had no idea. I have absolutely no recollection of any of it. Given how badly I was hurt, I have no clue what I could have even been saying, or how coherent I was, or whether I was scared and lashing out or... anything.

And now I can't stop thinking: was I a nightmare to deal with? Was I combative? Did I say something horrible to people who were literally fighting to keep me alive?

I know logically that trauma does wild things to the brain and that first responders are trained for this. I know. But knowing that doesn't fully quiet the guilt.

I ended up sending a card to the fire station and the paramedic crew that responded. I thanked them as genuinely as I could. I didn't ask about my behavior because honestly I was too scared of the answer.

Has anyone else gone through something like this? The not-remembering combined with the worrying about what you might have done or said during those missing hours? Am I alone in this weird guilt spiral?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    clever-otter-309

    You are absolutely not alone. I lost about 18 hours after my accident and found out later I was talking to firefighters at the scene. I was terrified to know what I said. What I eventually learned — from a family member who spoke with one of the crew — was that I kept asking about my dog who wasn't even in the car. Completely confused, but not mean. Most of the time that's how it goes. Your brain is just... surviving.

    • 20
      tidy-sparrow-620

      The fact that you were conscious and communicating, as scary as that sounds to look back on, probably actually helped the crew assess you. You being responsive gave them information. In a weird way, whatever your injured brain was doing in those moments may have helped them help you.

  • 12
    careful-vole-174

    I work in emergency care and I want to gently reassure you: what you're describing — being conscious but having no memory of it — is extremely common after serious trauma. It's called post-traumatic amnesia and it can cover hours or even days. During that window people can seem surprisingly alert but are essentially running on autopilot. If you were combative or scared or said strange things, the crew would not have taken it personally at all. We're trained to understand that the person talking to us is not fully "there" in the way they normally would be. The card you sent probably meant the world to them regardless.

  • 4
    silent-stoat-225

    Honestly just reading this made me emotional. The fact that you're worried about their feelings after everything you went through says so much about you. Please be gentle with yourself.

  • 7
    quiet-marmot-046

    Here's the practical reality: first responders deal with people screaming, swinging, biting, and saying genuinely wild things at scenes. It comes with the job and they don't go home holding grudges against trauma patients. Even if you were unpleasant — which you don't actually know — it would not have registered to them the way you think it did. Send the card, move on, stop punishing yourself for something you literally could not control.

    • 8
      level-sidewalk879

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 13
    patient-marten-275

    I'm curious — has anyone who was actually there ever told you specifically that you were difficult, or are you just filling in a blank with worst-case scenarios? Because there's a big difference between "I don't know what I did" and "I have reason to believe I behaved badly." Might be worth examining whether this anxiety is based on any real evidence or if your brain is just torturing you with uncertainty.

    • 10
      calm-traveler562

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 18
    swift-mole-098

    The guilt spiral is so real and I don't think people who haven't been through something like this fully get it. I felt guilty for months — about the first responders, about my passenger, about the other driver, about my family seeing me in that state. Therapy helped me a lot with untangling which guilt was rational and which was just my brain trying to make sense of something senseless. If you're not already talking to someone, it might be worth it.

    • 2
      careful-dreamer776

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 21
    hearty-tern-633

    Slightly different angle here — if your case ever involves any legal proceedings, that gap in memory and the documented post-traumatic amnesia is actually medically significant and should be in your records. Not saying that's your focus right now, just worth knowing that what you experienced has a name and documentation matters. But honestly, on the human side of what you asked? You sent a thank-you card. That's more than most people do.

    • 0
      patient-commuter887

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.