The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Car accidentsspry-dove-658

Is it normal to feel this messed up after a crash even when everyone "walked away fine"?

I don't even know how to start this so bear with me.

About a month ago I was a passenger in my cousin's truck when he ran a red light and we got T-boned on my side. Airbags went off, glass everywhere. ER doc said no broken bones, sent me home with some muscle relaxers and told me to follow up with my regular doctor. So on paper, I "walked away fine."

Except I really didn't.

I've been having these weird dizzy spells and my upper back and shoulder have been killing me for weeks. I keep waking up at like 3am convinced the crash is happening again — like full heart-pounding, sweating kind of stuff. I've never had anxiety in my life and now I can't even ride in the passenger seat without gripping the door handle the whole time.

The part that's really eating me up though is the practical stuff. My cousin's insurance is handling it but everything moves SO slow. I had to take almost two weeks off my delivery job because I couldn't sit for long periods, which means my paycheck basically evaporated. My roommate has been understanding but rent doesn't care about my situation, you know?

I feel embarrassed even posting this because I keep telling myself "you didn't break anything, stop being dramatic." But this doesn't feel like drama. This feels like something happened to me and my body and brain are still catching up to it.

Can anyone relate? Is this a normal part of the process or am I losing it? Would really appreciate hearing from people who've been through something similar.

12replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

12 replies

  • 8
    sharp-kestrel-763

    You are absolutely not losing it. I went through something almost identical two years ago — passenger in a side-impact, "minor injuries" according to the ER, and then weeks of waking up panicked at night and feeling like my heart was going to jump out of my chest every time a car came too close to mine. What you're describing sounds a lot like acute stress response, which is a very real thing your brain does after trauma. It does NOT mean you're dramatic. It means something scary happened to you.

    • 19
      silent-fox-952

      Please don't minimize what you're experiencing. The 3am wake-ups, the hypervigilance in the car, the physical symptoms that linger — these are textbook signs that your nervous system is still in a stress response. The ER cleared you for broken bones, but they don't do a full workup on soft tissue or psychological impact. I'd strongly encourage you to get a follow-up with your primary care doc and be really specific and honest about the sleep issues and anxiety. Ask about a referral to PT for the shoulder and back too. Those things often get worse if you just wait them out.

    • 3
      warm-owl-468

      Ugh, reading this made my chest tight. You went through something terrifying and your body is remembering it even when your brain is trying to move on. Please be gentle with yourself right now. You're not being dramatic at all.

  • 13
    bright-newt-233

    One thing I want to flag — do NOT tell the insurance adjuster that you're feeling "fine" or "better" just to be polite or move things along. They will absolutely use that against you when it comes to any injury claim. If you're still having symptoms, those are part of your claim. Document everything. Write down your symptoms daily if you can, even in your phone notes app. Lost wages count too — keep any records showing the shifts you missed.

    • 10
      weary-optimist647

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

  • 15
    swift-crane-618

    Former adjuster here. The "walked away fine" framing is something insurance companies honestly love because a lot of people talk themselves out of pursuing what they're actually owed. Soft tissue injuries, sleep disruption, anxiety — these are legitimate and compensable in most personal injury claims. The issue is they're easy to undervalue if you don't document them consistently and early. Start keeping a simple daily log of how you feel physically and emotionally. Even a few sentences a day can make a huge difference later.

  • 18
    candid-raven-299

    Just from a process standpoint — if you haven't already, it's worth getting at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before you sign anything with your cousin's insurance. Not saying you need to sue anyone, but adjusters will often push a quick settlement while you're still symptomatic, and once you sign a release you typically can't go back for more even if your symptoms get worse. The consult costs you nothing and at least you'd know where you stand. Also, lost wages are something that can be documented and included — save your pay stubs and any communication from your employer about missed shifts.

    • 3
      tired-parent152

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

  • 17
    bold-grouse-350

    Real talk: stop waiting to feel "bad enough" to take this seriously. You have physical symptoms, you have financial losses, and you have what sounds like genuine trauma response. All of that matters. Go to the doctor, tell them everything, and get it in writing. Don't tough it out in silence.

    • 7
      weathered-late-shift389

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 14
    bold-crane-576

    I know it feels overwhelming right now but the fact that you're naming what you're feeling and reaching out is actually a really healthy sign. A lot of people stuff this down and it comes out sideways months later. You're already ahead of that curve. The sleep stuff and anxiety can get better — especially with some support. Hang in there.

    • 5
      gentle-neighbor880

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.