The Shoulder
The Shoulder
58
Car accidentskeen-otter-088

How do you actually rebuild yourself after a bad crash stole who you were?

I don't even know how to start this post. About 18 months ago I was hit by a driver who ran a red light at full speed. I was on my way home from the gym — totally routine Tuesday. The next thing I remember is waking up in the ICU with my sister holding my hand.

I had a broken pelvis, shattered tibia, fractured vertebrae, and a traumatic brain injury that still messes with my memory and concentration. I had three surgeries in six weeks. I was in inpatient rehab for almost two months. I'm 34 and I had to learn to walk again like a toddler.

Before the crash I was me — a personal trainer, coached youth soccer on weekends, had a whole community around me. Now I'm living in my parents' spare room, I've gained weight from the immobility, and most of my old friends kind of... drifted. I think they didn't know what to say, so they said nothing.

The PTSD is the part nobody warned me about. I flinch every time a car brakes near me. I had a panic attack just sitting in the passenger seat last month.

I'm not asking about the legal stuff right now — I know that's moving. I just want to know from other people who've been through something serious:

How did you find yourself again? Did you? Does it actually get better or do you just learn to carry it differently?

I feel guilty even posting this because I'm alive and I know that matters. But I'm grieving the person I used to be and I don't know how to stop.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    keen-sparrow-044

    I could have written this post two years ago. Different injuries but same grief — grieving yourself while you're still here. What I can tell you honestly is that it doesn't snap back, but it does shift. For me the turning point was stopping trying to get back to who I was and just getting curious about who I could be now. That sounds like a bumper sticker and I hated hearing it at first, but eventually it became real. You're still in the thick of it. 18 months feels long but with injuries that serious, you're still pretty early.

  • 23
    humble-wolf-400

    The PTSD piece you're describing — flinching, panic in the car — that's not weakness, that's your nervous system doing exactly what nervous systems do after a life-threatening event. It got wired for survival and it hasn't gotten the memo that you're safe now. A trauma-specialized therapist (look specifically for somatic therapy or EMDR, not just general talk therapy) can genuinely help retrain that. I work with trauma patients and the ones who do the best long-term almost always get that specific support. Please don't skip it just because everything else feels overwhelming.

  • 15
    patient-beaver-477

    I know this probably sounds annoying right now but — the fact that you're asking how to rebuild means part of you already believes it's possible. That part is fighting for you even when you're exhausted. Hold onto that.

  • 9
    humble-stoat-600

    Reading this made me tear up. You survived something unsurvivable and you're still showing up every day even when every day is hard. I don't have advice, I just want you to know you're not invisible. The friends who drifted — that's on them, not you. You deserved better from them.

    • 8
      weary-dreamer821

      Wish I had seen this a month ago — would have saved me a lot of stress.

  • 14
    spry-fox-642

    The friend thing hit me hard. I lost basically my entire social circle after my accident too. What helped me was finding communities specifically around recovery — not just injury recovery but life-after-trauma communities. Online ones count. I felt way less alone once I was talking to people who actually got it. Your old friends couldn't get it. That's not cruelty, it's just limitation. But there are people out there who will.

    • 2
      patient-dreamer234

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 19
    silent-marmot-336

    You asked if it gets better or if you just learn to carry it differently. Honestly? Both, and the order matters. First you learn to carry it, and then — slowly — the load actually does get lighter. Don't let anyone rush you into performing recovery before you're ready. But also don't let the isolation become permanent if you can help it. Loneliness is its own injury and it compounds everything else.

  • 18
    mellow-beaver-455

    Not pushing back on your pain at all — I believe every word. I'm just curious: are you getting any mental health support right now alongside the physical rehab? Because the way you describe it, it sounds like the psychological piece might not be getting the same attention as the physical injuries, and in my experience that's where people get really stuck.

  • 17
    clear-crow-983

    This isn't the point of your post and please ignore this if it's not helpful right now — but when you're ready, make sure whoever is handling your case is documenting the psychological impact, not just the physical injuries. Loss of career, lifestyle changes, PTSD, loss of enjoyment of life — all of that matters legally. Too many people only think about the medical bills and miss the bigger picture. Just something to have in the back of your mind when you're ready to think about it.

  • 19
    gentle-dove-475

    Not legal advice, just want to echo what the paralegal said — the emotional and life-quality losses you're describing are real and compensable components in personal injury cases. Keep journaling if you can, even messily. Notes about bad days, things you can't do, moments the PTSD hits. It serves both your mental health and your case. But mostly: be kind to yourself right now. The legal process will move whether or not you're at 100%, and you don't have to have it together to deserve help.