The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
daring-owl-929

Hit something on the highway at dawn, car is gone, and I can't stop shaking — is this normal?

I don't even know how to start this. It happened four days ago and I still feel like I'm living in a fog.

It was early morning, barely light out, and I was heading to my shift on the interstate. Out of nowhere there was an animal — massive — right in the middle of my lane. No time to do anything. Hit it dead on at highway speed. Airbags everywhere. The car just... died. Wouldn't move.

I managed to get it as far onto the shoulder as I could and turned on my hazards. I was shaking so bad I could barely hold my phone. Called my sister first, which I know wasn't the smart move, but I just needed to hear a voice. She talked me into calling for help. While I was on with dispatch, I got out because someone passing had rolled down their window and yelled that I needed to move away from the vehicle. Thank god I listened, because not even two minutes later another car clipped mine from behind.

I wasn't physically hurt beyond some bruising and a sore neck. But I feel... broken in a different way. Every time I ride in a car now I'm gripping the door handle. I had a full-on panic attack in a parking lot yesterday over nothing. I keep hearing sounds from that morning when I'm trying to fall asleep.

I have full coverage so the car situation is being handled I think. But nobody told me how to handle this part. The mental part. Has anyone else felt this way after an accident? Does it get better? And should I be documenting how I'm feeling somehow, or does that not matter?

Sorry this is long. I just needed to get it out somewhere.

13replies

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

13 replies

  • 6
    curious-heron-193

    The shaking, the intrusive sounds, gripping the door handle as a passenger — I felt every single word of this. I was in a bad highway accident two years ago and the physical stuff healed way faster than my head did. It does get better but it takes longer than people expect. Be patient with yourself right now.

  • 13
    plain-swift-851

    What you're describing — the flashbacks, the hypervigilance in cars, trouble sleeping, the physical anxiety response — those are really classic acute stress reactions after a traumatic event. Totally normal given what you went through. That said, if it's still this intense a couple weeks from now, please talk to a doctor or therapist. Acute stress can tip into PTSD if it doesn't get addressed. Don't wait it out alone thinking it'll just go away on its own. You deserve support.

    • 0
      honest-dreamer893

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

  • 7
    gentle-raven-133

    To answer your question about documenting — yes, absolutely keep a record of how you're feeling. Write it down daily if you can, even just a few sentences. Note the panic attacks, the sleep issues, the anxiety in the car. If you end up having any kind of claim (the rear-end portion especially could involve another driver's liability), psychological and emotional suffering is very much part of damages. A paper trail of your symptoms, even informal journal entries, helps establish that this isn't something you're exaggerating after the fact.

    • 11
      patient-hare-014

      Just a heads up — if anyone from any insurance company (yours or the other driver's) tries to get a recorded statement from you about how you're feeling or how the accident affected you, be really careful. They are not your friend in that moment. What you say can be used to minimize what you're owed. Don't downplay anything, and honestly consider talking to someone before you give any official statements.

  • 11
    swift-beaver-637

    Not legal advice at all, but the rear-end portion of what happened to you is worth looking into. A second vehicle striking yours after you were already stopped is a separate incident with its own liability questions. The mental health impact you're describing — anxiety, sleep disruption, fear of driving — is recognized as real harm. If you haven't already, at least have a free consultation with a PI attorney to understand your options. Most won't charge anything unless there's a recovery.

    • 1
      kind-traveler713

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

  • 7
    patient-hare-026

    I just want to say I'm really glad you're okay. Like, physically in one piece. Because the way you described getting out of the car right before it got hit again... that's genuinely terrifying. Please be gentle with yourself. You went through something awful.

    • 4
      weathered-road-soul599

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 16
    candid-owl-442

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that you got out of that car when you did — that instinct probably protected you more than you realize. You made the right calls under enormous pressure while panicking. That says something about you. The anxiety you're feeling now is your nervous system doing its job a little too hard. It can be retrained. You got through the actual worst moment — you'll get through this part too.

    • 3
      honest-optimist297

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

  • 8
    curious-sparrow-608

    Three things: see a doctor and tell them exactly what you told us — the panic attacks, the sleep issues, the flashbacks. Get it on the medical record now. Second, don't post about this on any social media, even vague stuff. Third, keep every piece of paper you get from the insurance company and don't sign anything that says 'full and final settlement' without understanding what it means. You're in the acute phase right now and not in the right headspace to make permanent decisions.

  • 17
    kind-vole-129

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest with you — the mental health side of accidents is almost always undervalued early on because people either don't report it or they report it and adjusters treat it as secondary to the property damage. Document everything like the paralegal said. And when the adjuster calls sounding super friendly and helpful, just remember their job is to close your claim as cheaply as possible. That's not me being mean, that's just literally what the job is.