The Shoulder
The Shoulder
62
Car accidentssilent-marmot-977

Nobody warned me how exhausting the 'after' part of an accident is

It's been about three weeks since a guy blew through a red light and hit my driver's side door. Physically I walked away — some soreness, a stiff neck that's mostly faded. Everyone keeps saying 'you're so lucky' and yeah, I get it. But nobody talks about what comes after.

The mental load is unreal. I'm juggling a rental car that the other driver's insurance is dragging their feet on, a repair shop that keeps pushing back my completion date, a stack of forms I don't fully understand, and I still have to show up to work and function like a normal person. I snapped at my roommate last week over nothing and then just sat in my car for 20 minutes because I didn't want to go inside and talk to anyone.

I keep second-guessing every decision. Did I say the right thing to the adjuster? Should I have gone to urgent care even when I felt mostly okay? Did I document enough at the scene?

I think I expected the hard part to be the crash and then it would just... get cleaned up. Like it would resolve itself in a week. Three weeks later and it feels like I'm managing a part-time job I never signed up for.

Has anyone else felt this way? How did you get through the grind of it all without losing your mind? Any specific things you did that actually helped?

14replies

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14 replies

  • 16
    gentle-stoat-560

    A few practical things that really help with the paperwork overload: create one folder (physical or digital, whatever works for you) and put everything in it — photos, repair estimates, rental receipts, medical anything, every email from the insurance company. Also start a simple running note on your phone logging how you feel each day and what tasks the accident is making you deal with. It sounds like overkill right now but that kind of record is really useful later if your claim gets complicated.

  • 16
    genuine-raven-800

    Two things: stop talking to the other driver's adjuster without at least knowing your rights first, and go see a doctor this week. Not because you're necessarily hurt, but because 'I felt okay so I didn't go' is the sentence that comes back to bite people. Get it on record.

    • 3
      curious-rider211

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

  • 14
    sharp-newt-590

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but three weeks in and you're still standing, still asking smart questions, still advocating for yourself. That matters. A lot of people just sign whatever and move on because they're too overwhelmed. The fact that you're pausing to think about whether you said the right thing means you're paying attention — and that usually leads to better outcomes.

    • 3
      patient-parent443

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

    • 5
      grounded-overpass934

      Thank you both, this gave me the push I needed to make the call.

  • 11
    quiet-owl-479

    Oh man, this is basically word for word my experience from last year. Everyone celebrated that I wasn't seriously hurt and then acted like it was over. It was so not over. The rental car chaos alone nearly broke me — I spent probably six hours on hold with various people in the first two weeks. You're not being dramatic. This stuff is genuinely exhausting and I don't think people get it unless they've lived it.

    • 14
      swift-crow-540

      The adjuster question you asked yourself — trust that instinct. They are not on your side, full stop. Their job is to close your claim as cheaply and quickly as possible. Every time you talk to them, keep notes: date, time, who you spoke to, exactly what they said. It sounds paranoid until you need it and you're really glad you did it.

  • 11
    calm-seal-865

    I just want to say I'm really glad you're okay, and also that what you're feeling makes complete sense. The whiplash of going from 'crisis mode' to 'now figure out all this bureaucracy' is a lot for anyone. Be easy on yourself. You're handling something most people have no training for.

    • 17
      sharp-grouse-696

      Please don't ignore the neck stiffness even if it feels like it's 'mostly faded.' Soft tissue injuries are sneaky — they can seem to improve and then flare up weeks later, especially if you've been stressed and tensed up. Get a baseline documented with a doctor now while it's still clearly connected to the accident. It protects both your health and your options.

    • 18
      keen-crow-621

      Quick question — have you actually received anything in writing from the other driver's insurance yet, or is it all been phone calls? And do you know for certain their insurance has accepted liability? Just asking because 'dragging their feet on the rental' sometimes means they're still disputing fault, which is a very different situation than just being slow.

  • 11
    wise-badger-975

    Not legal advice, but I'll say this: the questions you're asking yourself — did I document enough, did I say the wrong thing to the adjuster, should I have gotten medical attention — those are exactly the things worth going over with someone who knows personal injury claims before you sign anything. A lot of PI attorneys do free consultations. You don't have to hire anyone, but at least get informed. The 'after' part of an accident has real deadlines attached to it depending on where you live.

  • 9
    daring-marmot-331

    I used to work claims and I'll be honest with you — the dragging-feet thing on the rental is sometimes deliberate. The longer the inconvenience goes on, the more likely some people are to just accept a lower offer to make it stop. Don't let the fatigue push you into settling anything before you're actually ready. Also, re: urgent care — if your neck soreness is still showing up at all, even mildly, it's not too late to see a doctor and have it documented.

    • 8
      calm-parent276

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