The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Car accidentsquiet-seal-902

Head-on collision nearly killed us both — still processing what happened

I don't really know how to start this so I'm just going to type it out.

My boyfriend and I were coming back from a long weekend trip, maybe forty minutes from home on a rural two-lane road we've driven probably a hundred times. Clear night, dry pavement, nothing weird about the drive at all. Then out of absolutely nowhere a car crossed the center line and hit us almost dead-on. I remember seeing headlights and then — nothing.

I came to with the airbags deployed and my boyfriend unconscious in the driver's seat. I was screaming his name and he wasn't responding. I could hear someone outside yelling to call 911. I tried to get out but my door was completely crushed inward. A truck driver who'd seen it happen pulled over and got my door open enough for me to squeeze out.

The other driver didn't make it.

My boyfriend had to be cut out. He was life-flighted to a trauma center about an hour away. I rode in the ambulance behind the helicopter not knowing if he was going to be okay.

He survived — fractured ribs, a collapsed lung, broken collarbone. I have a concussion, some soft tissue stuff in my neck, and honestly I think I'm still in shock weeks later.

We have so many questions right now. The at-fault driver had insurance but we've heard very little from them. Our own insurer has been calling a lot which feels weird. We don't have a lawyer yet. We don't even know where to start.

Has anyone been through something like this? How did you handle the insurance side when injuries are this serious?

10replies

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

10 replies

  • 9
    curious-wolf-080

    I went through a really serious head-on about two years ago — different circumstances but that same feeling of 'I don't even know where to begin' is so real. First thing I'd say: stop talking to both insurance companies until you have some kind of legal guidance. I made the mistake of giving a recorded statement to the at-fault driver's insurer early on and it came back to complicate things later. You're not required to do that, at least not right away.

    • 14
      sharp-otter-137

      The fact that YOUR OWN insurer is calling you a lot is the part that jumped out at me. They're not calling to check on you — they're building a file. Be careful what you say. 'How are you feeling?' sounds friendly but your answer can end up in a claim note.

    • 22
      sharp-swift-457

      I used to work inside an insurance company, and I'll be honest with you: when a claim involves a fatality and serious injuries, the other side's insurer is already talking to lawyers internally. They know the exposure is high. That's not to scare you — it's just the reality. You should be on equal footing with representation of your own, especially with injuries like a collapsed lung. Those cases have long recovery timelines that early settlements don't account for.

  • 10
    bright-crow-524

    Please make sure your boyfriend is getting proper follow-up care for that lung. A collapsed lung after trauma can have complications that show up weeks later — fluid buildup, scar tissue, things that affect breathing long-term. Keep every appointment and make sure everything is documented. That paper trail matters medically AND if you end up in any kind of claim process.

  • 11
    silent-otter-715

    I just want to say I'm really sorry. Reading this was a lot. You got through something that would have broken most people. Be gentle with yourself — the shock and disorientation you're feeling right now is completely normal after trauma like this. Please don't feel like you have to have everything figured out immediately.

  • 17
    candid-elk-147

    Not legal advice, but cases involving a fatality and multiple serious injuries are genuinely complex — there are often multiple layers of coverage (the at-fault driver's policy, your own uninsured/underinsured provisions, possibly others) and the interaction between all of them matters a lot. Most PI attorneys who handle serious injury cases work on contingency, meaning no upfront cost to you. At minimum, a free consultation would help you understand what you're actually dealing with. Don't sign anything or accept anything before you do that.

  • 19
    silent-grouse-658

    One practical thing: start a folder — physical or digital — with everything. Photos of the vehicles if you have them, any ER paperwork, follow-up appointment records, any communication from either insurance company. Even write down a timeline of what you remember from that night while it's still somewhat fresh. You'll thank yourself later. Also, if either insurer sends you anything to sign, don't sign it without understanding exactly what it is.

    • 9
      curious-parent675

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

  • 6
    bold-lynx-382

    Here's the short version: get a personal injury attorney before you do anything else with insurance. Injuries this serious — lung, ribs, concussion, plus your boyfriend's ongoing recovery — don't resolve in a few weeks, and early settlement offers almost never account for what comes later. Don't let urgency or exhaustion push you into a bad decision.

    • 4
      restless-mile-marker690

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.