The Shoulder
The Shoulder
51
Car accidentsquiet-seal-734

Hit and run left me shaking — is it normal to feel this wrecked even with minor damage?

This happened two days ago and I still feel like I'm losing my mind a little, so bear with me.

I was pulling out of my apartment complex — a route I drive literally every single day — when a truck clipped the front corner of my car pretty hard and just... kept going. Didn't stop, didn't slow down, nothing. I managed to pull over and I just sat there hyperventilating for I don't even know how long. A stranger actually knocked on my window to check on me, which honestly made me cry harder.

The damage to my car is real but not catastrophic. My neck is stiff and I've got some soreness across my shoulders, but no ER visit or anything. So logically I keep telling myself it wasn't that bad. But then why do I feel like this?

I couldn't sleep last night. Every time I closed my eyes I kept replaying it — the sound of the impact, watching that truck disappear down the street like nothing happened. I woke up twice from dreams about it.

The police report is filed but the officer basically told me without a plate or a clear description, there's not much to go on. So whoever did this is just out there living their life. That part makes me furious in a way I don't really know what to do with.

I have to drive past that same exit every single day. I already drove by it once and my hands started shaking on the wheel.

Is the emotional fallout from something like this normal even when the physical stuff seems minor? I feel almost embarrassed by how hard I'm taking it. Has anyone else been here?

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15 replies

  • 20
    quiet-seal-223

    What you're describing — the replaying, the sleep disruption, the physical startle response while driving — those are really classic acute stress responses. Your brain literally experienced a threat and it's doing exactly what brains do: trying to process and protect you. It doesn't care that the dent is small.

    The neck and shoulder soreness is also worth keeping an eye on. Soft tissue stuff from impacts can take a few days to fully show up. Please don't brush off your body symptoms just because you didn't go to the ER in the moment. See a doctor, even just your primary care, and mention both the physical AND how you've been feeling emotionally. They can connect you to the right support.

    • 2
      thankful-overpass320

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

    • 7
      weary-parent530

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

  • 19
    steady-lynx-207

    Couple of practical things: see a doctor for the neck/shoulder stuff NOW, not next week. Get it on record. File with your insurance if you haven't. And honestly, if driving past that spot is triggering you every day, it might be worth a few sessions with a therapist who does trauma — even just 3 or 4 sessions can make a real difference for this kind of thing. You don't have to white-knuckle your way through it alone.

    • 2
      kind-driver347

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

  • 18
    patient-fox-513

    You are not overreacting, I promise you. I was rear-ended at low speed last year and walked away with just some bruising — but for weeks I was a mess. Anxious in the car, couldn't focus at work, kept having this weird background dread I couldn't shake. The physical damage to the car has nothing to do with how much your nervous system got rattled. Give yourself permission to feel it.

  • 15
    patient-bison-909

    One thing I'd flag: if you have uninsured motorist coverage, that may actually apply to hit-and-run situations depending on your state. Don't just assume you're out of luck and let the claim window close. And whatever you do, be careful how you describe your symptoms to your own insurance company — keep it factual, don't downplay, and don't over-explain. They are not your friend even when they sound friendly.

  • 15
    warm-crane-708

    Make sure you're documenting everything right now while it's fresh — take photos of the damage if you haven't, write down exactly what you remember about the truck (color, rough size, any partial plate, direction it went), save the police report number, and start keeping a simple notes app log of your symptoms day by day including the sleep issues and anxiety. If your neck and shoulders are still bothering you in a week, that record matters more than people think.

  • 14
    quiet-badger-482

    You pulled over safely, you got a police report filed, and you're already talking about it and processing instead of bottling it up — honestly that's more than a lot of people manage after their first accident. The shaky hands on the wheel are going to get better. The first few times are the hardest.

    • 2
      gentle-driver720

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

  • 12
    clear-crane-181

    Not legal advice, but: the emotional symptoms you're describing — sleep disruption, anxiety, avoidance of the location — can actually be part of a legitimate injury claim, not just the physical stuff. If there's any path to identifying this driver later, or if your UM coverage applies, those psychological impacts are documented injuries. Keep that log someone mentioned above. It matters.

  • 11
    genuine-otter-258

    I just want to say — the fact that a stranger stopped to check on you in the moment and you're reaching out here now tells me you're going to be okay. You're not crazy. Someone violated your sense of safety and just drove away like you didn't matter. Of course that stings deep. Be gentle with yourself right now.

    • 10
      calm-dreamer315

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

  • 5
    kind-sparrow-742

    Jumping in on the UM coverage point above — yes, hit-and-run often qualifies as an uninsured motorist claim. I used to handle these. The thing people don't realize is that some policies require you to report within a pretty tight window, sometimes 24-72 hours, so check your policy TODAY if you haven't already. Don't rely on the insurance rep to volunteer that information to you.

    • 10
      careful-wanderer165

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.