The Shoulder
The Shoulder
68
daring-wren-362

Hit at highway speed while stopped — physics make no sense to me, how am I not dead?

Hey everyone, found this forum while falling down a rabbit hole at 2am trying to make sense of what happened to me last week. Still kind of in shock honestly.

I was sitting in a line of cars that had slowed to a stop because of construction merging ahead. Normal stuff, happens every morning on my commute. I had plenty of room in front of me, wasn't on my phone, just waiting. I glanced in my mirror and saw a pickup way back still moving fast — like really fast. That frozen moment where your brain goes "oh no" before you can do anything? Yeah. I didn't even have time to brace.

He hit me so hard I was shoved forward into the SUV ahead of me, who then got pushed into the car ahead of them. Three-car pileup just like that. The pickup that hit me then spun sideways and ended up partially in the next lane where another car clipped it. Four vehicles total involved.

Here's what I can't get out of my head: none of my airbags went off. I walked away with a messed-up neck, some bruising, and what the ER called a mild concussion. How? He had to have been doing close to highway speed. My trunk is basically in my backseat now.

I have dashcam footage of the whole thing — you can hear the impact and see the aftermath. Already filed a police report and called my insurance. Haven't talked to his insurance yet.

Has anyone else had a crash that just physically doesn't compute? Like you look at your car and cannot understand how you're sitting there typing about it?

12replies

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12 replies

  • 22
    quick-bison-525

    Not legal advice, but with four vehicles involved and multiple drivers, the liability picture can get complicated fast — especially if any of the other drivers or their insurers try to point fingers at each other. Dashcam footage is gold in a situation like this. If you haven't already, back it up somewhere safe, like cloud storage and a USB drive, today. A lot of attorneys who handle injury cases offer free consultations and it might be worth at least understanding what your options look like before you start fielding calls from adjusters.

    • 2
      gentle-wanderer201

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 17
    gentle-vole-014

    I just want to say — it's completely normal that your brain is stuck on "how am I alive." That's almost a trauma response in itself, replaying the physics of it. Please make sure you're talking to someone, even a friend, not just processing this alone at 2am. I'm really glad you're here to type this out.

  • 17
    daring-vole-081

    When you say none of the airbags deployed — do you mean front, side, all of them? And did the police report have any estimate of the other driver's speed, or is that from the dashcam? Just trying to understand the full picture. Also, was the other driver cited or did they claim some kind of emergency?

    • 8
      patient-driver287

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

  • 15
    humble-dove-622

    The airbag thing gets asked a lot and I can actually shed some light. Airbags are calibrated to deploy based on deceleration sensors, not just impact force — and in a rear-end chain collision, the way the forces transfer through multiple cars doesn't always trigger the threshold the sensors are looking for. It's counterintuitive but it happens more than people think. Doesn't mean the crash wasn't severe, clearly it was given what your car looks like. The photos of your vehicle are actually going to matter a lot for documenting the severity of what happened.

  • 13
    plain-marmot-361

    Please don't let the "mild" concussion label make you dismiss your symptoms. ERs use that term for a pretty wide range, and concussion effects can actually get worse or show up more clearly in the days after — headaches, light sensitivity, trouble concentrating, mood swings. Keep a journal of how you feel each day and follow up with your primary care doc or a neurologist, not just the ER visit. Neck injuries after rear-impacts are also notorious for not showing their full hand right away. Take it seriously even if you feel okay-ish right now.

  • 10
    plain-stoat-771

    Do NOT talk to his insurance company without being really careful. They will call you sounding super friendly and sympathetic, and anything you say — even "I'm feeling a little better" — can and will be used to lowball you later. You are under no obligation to give them a recorded statement. Seriously, look into your options before you pick up that call.

    • 6
      calm-wanderer439

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

  • 7
    cool-wolf-260

    I felt this in my chest. I was rear-ended at a red light two years ago by someone who never even touched their brakes — I have no idea how I walked away either. The car looked like a crushed soda can. I think sometimes the car just absorbs more than we realize, which is simultaneously reassuring and terrifying to think about.

    • 12
      keen-sparrow-443

      Three things: back up that dashcam footage right now if you haven't. See a doctor again even if they already cleared you — ER visits are triage, not full injury workups. And don't sign or agree to anything from any insurance company until you know what your medical situation actually looks like. You might feel fine for a week and then your neck decides otherwise.

    • 6
      tired-traveler157

      Solid advice. Getting it in writing is the part most people skip.