The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
Car accidentsbold-hare-354

Lost it completely after my crash and now I can't stop cringing at myself

This happened about a week ago and I still feel mortified thinking about it.

I was driving home from work on a normal Tuesday afternoon, completely sober, following all the rules — and a pickup ran a red light and slammed into my passenger side hard enough to spin my car around. I ended up facing the wrong direction in the middle of the road.

Here's the part I keep replaying: I just... broke down. Like full ugly crying, shaking so bad I couldn't hold my phone, gasping for air. A woman knocked on my window to check on me and I couldn't even form words to answer her. I just stared at her. I think she thought I was seriously hurt because she started yelling for someone to call 911. Eventually two other people opened my door and basically talked me down like I was a scared little kid. I was so out of it I didn't even notice one of my shoes had come off.

The actual injuries turned out to be a mild concussion, some soft tissue stuff in my shoulder and upper back, and a badly bruised knee. Nothing broken. No surgery. I got discharged from the ER the same night.

And yet I acted like the world was ending. I feel SO embarrassed. Everyone else seemed calm and capable and I was a complete mess in the middle of the road for what felt like an hour (probably wasn't).

Does this kind of reaction happen to normal people? Or is something wrong with me? Has anyone else fallen apart like this and felt ashamed about it afterward?

15replies

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15 replies

  • 24
    calm-raven-871

    What you're describing is a completely textbook acute stress response — your nervous system flooded with adrenaline and cortisol and basically hijacked your higher thinking. Fight, flight, or freeze. You froze. That's not weakness, that's just how some nervous systems respond to sudden trauma, and there's genuinely nothing you could have done differently in that moment.

    What I'd actually watch for now is how you're doing in the days following. Are you sleeping okay? Avoiding driving? Feeling jumpy or having the moment replay on you a lot? Those can be signs of something worth talking to a professional about — not because something is 'wrong' with you, but because your brain went through something scary and sometimes needs help resetting.

    • 3
      plainspoken-overpass402

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

    • 7
      honest-parent189

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 21
    clever-marmot-389

    Just a practical heads up — the concussion alone means you should be documenting everything. Keep a simple notes app journal of your symptoms day by day, even if they seem minor. Headaches, sleep issues, trouble concentrating, mood stuff. Concussion symptoms can drag on and evolve, and if you ever need to demonstrate what you went through, those contemporaneous notes are genuinely valuable. Also make sure the ER gave you discharge paperwork with your diagnoses listed out.

    • 5
      kind-parent206

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 18
    keen-swift-156

    Okay but can we also just acknowledge — you survived a car getting spun around, you managed to not seriously hurt anyone, and you walked out of the ER the same night? Your body did its job. The crying and shaking was just the pressure release valve going off. That's actually kind of remarkable when you think about it.

    • 4
      plainspoken-backseat240

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 18
    quick-badger-796

    Not legal advice, but for what it's worth — how you reacted emotionally at the scene has zero bearing on your legal standing. Courts and insurance companies care about liability and documented injury, not whether you kept your composure. If anything, documented emotional distress can actually be part of a claim. Don't let shame about your reaction make you feel like you have less of a case than you do.

    • 8
      patient-wanderer853

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 16
    swift-mole-581

    One thing I'd be careful about — if you talk to the other driver's insurance adjuster and mention that you were 'fine' or 'not that hurt,' they will absolutely use that against you later when your shoulder and back start showing how damaged they really are. Soft tissue injuries especially tend to get worse before they get better. Don't minimize yourself to them the way you're minimizing yourself here.

  • 14
    candid-owl-552

    Please do not be embarrassed — I did the exact same thing. Got rear-ended at a stoplight two years ago and completely shut down. Couldn't unlock my own car door, couldn't remember my husband's phone number, just sat there making sounds I didn't even recognize as coming from me. The brain does wild stuff when it thinks you're dying. There's nothing pathetic about it, I promise.

  • 11
    cool-raven-298

    Stop replaying it with shame and start replaying it to check your practical boxes. Did you get a police report? Did you photograph everything before your car got moved? Do you have the other driver's info and insurance? Those things matter way more right now than how you looked in the moment. The embarrassment will fade, a missing police report won't fix itself.

    • 12
      careful-bison-476

      Not trying to be harsh, but — have you had any panic attacks or anxiety episodes before this? I'm not saying your reaction wasn't normal, just that it might be worth knowing if there's a pattern, because that could affect how you approach recovery and whether talking to someone sooner rather than later makes sense.

  • 8
    mellow-tern-673

    I would have done the exact same thing, honestly. A truck SPUN YOUR CAR AROUND. That's terrifying! You're being way too hard on yourself.

    • 3
      plainspoken-road-soul919

      Did the timeline change anything for you? Mine dragged on for weeks.