The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentscool-fox-721

My little sister won't get in a car anymore after our crash — how do I help her?

So our family was in a pretty bad rear-end collision about six weeks ago. Everyone walked away without broken bones or anything, but my 7-year-old sister has completely shut down around cars. Like she screams and clings to the door frame every time we try to buckle her in for school. She had one really scary episode at the grocery store parking lot where she just froze and started hyperventilating.

I'm 17 and I was in the backseat with her during the crash. I keep replaying it too honestly, but watching her go through this is way harder than dealing with my own stuff.

Our parents are stressed about all the insurance stuff and doctor appointments and I feel like her emotional stuff is kind of getting lost in the shuffle. I've been trying to sit with her at night when she has bad dreams and I let her sleep in my room sometimes.

Does anyone have experience with this? Did your kids or younger siblings eventually get through the fear? I just want her to have a normal childhood and not be terrified of something as basic as riding in a car. Is there a specific type of counselor or therapist that actually helped? I don't even know where to start and I feel kind of helpless.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 12
    mellow-kestrel-457

    My nephew went through almost exactly this after a crash we were in together. What actually helped him was a child therapist who specialized in trauma — specifically something called EMDR. I'd never heard of it before but within a few months he was back to normal. Your sister's reaction is completely valid, and the fact that you're watching out for her is huge. Don't underestimate how much your presence means to her.

  • 10
    cool-swift-661

    What you're describing — the hyperventilating, freezing, sleep disturbances — those are classic signs of acute stress response in young kids, and they're really common after accidents even when there's no physical injury. The brain doesn't distinguish between 'minor' and 'major' when it comes to fear.

    Please push your parents to get her evaluated by a pediatric mental health professional sooner rather than later. Early intervention makes a real difference. In the meantime, don't force her into the car — give her small, low-pressure exposures like just sitting in a parked car with you and a favorite snack. Gradual is the way to go.

    • 3
      quiet-wanderer972

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 11
    clever-bison-185

    You sound like such a caring older sibling. The fact that you're even thinking about this at 17, while probably dealing with your own stress from the crash, says a lot. Please make sure someone is checking in on YOU too, okay? You matter in this equation.

    • 5
      silent-heron-235

      Just a heads up — if your family is dealing with insurance right now, don't let anyone downplay your sister's emotional symptoms just because she doesn't have a cast or stitches. Adjusters are trained to minimize payouts, and psychological injuries in kids are easy targets because they're harder to 'prove.' Make sure a doctor is documenting everything.

    • 4
      weary-neighbor444

      Appreciate the detailed write-up. Saving this for later.

  • 20
    tidy-raven-156

    One thing your parents might not realize — emotional and psychological trauma in children IS compensable in a personal injury claim, not just physical injuries. Things like therapy costs, behavioral changes, and documented distress can all be part of a claim. Make sure your parents are keeping a journal of your sister's episodes and any therapy appointments. That kind of documentation matters a lot later on.

    • 1
      curious-passenger281

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 11
    warm-sparrow-512

    Kids are genuinely resilient when they have the right support — and your sister has you. That's not nothing. With proper therapy and patience, a lot of children fully recover from this kind of fear. It feels permanent right now but it really doesn't have to be.

    • 16
      warm-grouse-670

      Two things: get her to a trauma-informed child therapist ASAP, and stop forcing the car thing for now. Forcing it before she's ready can make the fear worse. Also, look up 'play therapy' — it's weirdly effective for little kids processing scary experiences because they can't always verbalize what they're feeling.