The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
steady-mole-948

My husband was driving when we got hit — he's drowning in guilt and I don't know how to help him

This is kind of a two-part thing — dealing with the crash aftermath AND watching my husband fall apart emotionally, so bear with me.

About a week ago we were heading home from a friend's birthday dinner, totally normal night. My husband pulled out of a parking garage onto a one-way street and a car came flying through a red light and slammed into my side of the vehicle. No skid marks, didn't even slow down. The impact was on my door.

I ended up with three broken ribs, a fractured wrist, and some soft tissue stuff they're still evaluating. I'm home now but mobility is rough.

Here's the thing — my husband was not at fault. There's a traffic camera at that intersection and it clearly caught the other driver blowing the light. But he is destroying himself over this. He barely sleeps. He apologizes to me constantly. Last night I woke up at 2am and he was just sitting in the chair next to the bed watching me sleep. It broke my heart.

I keep telling him: you didn't run the red light. You couldn't have known. But logic isn't getting through right now.

On top of the emotional stuff, I'm trying to figure out the practical side — the other driver's insurance has already called me twice and I haven't called back because I don't know what to say. My own insurance is asking for a recorded statement. We don't have a lawyer yet.

Has anyone else dealt with a partner spiraling with guilt after an accident that genuinely wasn't their fault? How did you get through it — both the emotional part and the insurance chaos?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 20
    wise-crow-940

    I was the driver when my wife got hurt in an accident that wasn't my fault either, and honestly what you're describing with your husband sounds exactly like what I went through. It took me a really long time to accept that 'not at fault' and 'not responsible for the outcome' felt like two totally different things emotionally. Therapy genuinely helped me — not couples therapy, just me processing my own stuff so I could actually be present for her recovery instead of making it about my guilt.

  • 11
    silent-marten-283

    Three broken ribs plus a fractured wrist is serious — please make sure you're not pushing yourself too hard physically because you feel guilty about him feeling guilty. It's this weird loop I see with couples after trauma. Your healing has to come first. And watch your breathing with those ribs — people sometimes unconsciously take shallow breaths to avoid rib pain and end up with secondary complications. Follow up with your doctor religiously on that.

    • 3
      steady-walker401

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

    • 2
      weathered-co-pilot839

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 21
    daring-swift-823

    Do NOT call that other driver's insurance back without talking to someone first. I cannot stress this enough. They are not calling to help you. They want a recorded statement while you're still medicated, emotional, and don't fully know the extent of your injuries. That recording can be used to lowball or deny your claim later. Your own insurance's recorded statement request is also worth being careful about — you usually have an obligation to cooperate with your own carrier but you can ask for time.

  • 16
    cool-mole-877

    Former adjuster here. Those two calls from the other driver's insurance? That's a standard early-contact strategy. The faster they can get you on record before you lawyer up or before your full diagnosis is clear, the better for them. If liability is as obvious as you say — camera footage, red light violation — they know they're on the hook and they want to control the damages side of the equation. Don't give them anything to work with.

    • 7
      calm-commuter202

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

  • 19
    candid-hare-468

    A few practical things: First, get a copy of the police report if you haven't already — it should reference the camera footage as evidence. Second, start a pain and symptom journal today if you haven't. Just a simple daily note about what hurts, what you can't do, how you slept. It sounds tedious but it matters a lot later. Third, with the camera footage and a clear red-light violation, you're in a solid position liability-wise, but you still want someone in your corner before you talk to anyone. Not legal advice, just process stuff.

  • 6
    swift-bison-350

    I just want to say — the part about him sitting in the chair at 2am watching over you made me tear up a little. He loves you so much it's breaking him. I hope you both get some support through this, not just for the legal stuff but for your mental health as a couple. Accidents like this are traumatic for everyone involved, even the person who walked away unhurt.

  • 16
    hearty-owl-111

    Okay two things:

    1. Get a PI attorney on the phone this week. Most do free consultations. Camera footage of a clear red-light violation is about as good as it gets for your case — don't let that advantage get muddled by saying the wrong thing to an adjuster.

    2. Your husband needs to talk to someone. A therapist, his doctor, someone. You cannot heal from broken ribs while also carrying his emotional weight. That's not fair to you and it's not actually helping him process anything.

    • 10
      tired-dreamer594

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

  • 9
    quiet-finch-465

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that there's camera footage is genuinely huge. So many people are in situations where it's one person's word against another's and it drags on forever. You have evidence. That clarity, as painful as everything else is, should at least take one giant source of stress off the table for both of you.

  • 11
    quick-owl-669

    Has the camera footage actually been officially obtained and documented yet, or is this something you're assuming exists because you know there's a camera there? I'd make sure law enforcement or your attorney actually secures that footage soon — businesses and municipalities don't always keep recordings indefinitely, and some overwrite after 30 days or less.

    • 5
      plainspoken-co-pilot571

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