The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
tidy-otter-697

The other driver didn't make it. I survived. I don't know how to carry this.

I've been sitting with this for about two weeks and I genuinely don't know where else to put it.

A driver crossed into my lane on a two-lane highway — witnesses told the responding officer it looked like a medical emergency, possibly a seizure. The impact was bad. I was airlifted. He was gone at the scene.

I'm still here. Cracked ribs, a messed-up shoulder, some stuff with my vision they're still monitoring. But I'm here. And every time a nurse would come in and ask how I was feeling, I'd just think — this man is dead and I'm the one being brought jello and asked to rate my pain.

I keep turning over these little details in my head that I have no right to know and no way of finding out. Did he have people waiting for him somewhere that evening? Was someone expecting a call that never came? I didn't know him at all, but somehow he's in my life forever now.

People keep telling me I should be angry, or focused on "what I'm owed" because of my injuries. And I get it, I have real medical bills stacking up and I'm not working right now. That's real. But the anger just isn't what's taking up space in me — it's grief, I think? For someone I never met?

Has anyone else been through something like this — where the other driver didn't survive? How do you hold both things at once — your own pain and recovery AND this strange grief for a stranger? Did it ever get quieter in your head?

I really just want to know I'm not the only one who felt this way.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 12
    quiet-fox-450

    You are absolutely not alone in this. I was in an accident a few years ago where a pedestrian was killed — different situation, but that weight of being the one who kept breathing is something I still carry. What helped me was eventually accepting that grieving someone you never knew isn't weird, it's just human. You were there for one of the most significant moments of his life. That creates a connection whether you wanted it or not. Be patient with yourself. It doesn't get lighter fast, but it does get lighter.

    • 0
      hopeful-dreamer609

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

  • 18
    plain-otter-552

    What you're describing has a name — it's sometimes called survivor's guilt, and it's incredibly common after traumatic events where someone else didn't make it. It can sit right alongside your physical injuries and honestly make the recovery harder if it goes unaddressed. Please ask whoever is managing your follow-up care if they can connect you with a trauma-informed therapist. Not because anything is wrong with you — but because you deserve the same level of care for this as you're getting for your ribs.

    • 17
      mellow-swift-418

      I'm not going to give you legal advice here, but I will say that situations like this — where the at-fault driver is deceased — have a specific legal path that's different from a typical injury claim. It usually involves the deceased's estate and their insurance policy. It's worth at least one consultation with a PI attorney just so you understand what your options look like. The emotional complexity of this situation doesn't change your legal rights, even if it feels weird to think about them right now.

  • 8
    steady-crane-435

    I just want to say I'm really glad you're still here, and I think it says a lot about you that your first instinct was empathy for him and his family rather than anything else. That's not nothing. Sending you so much warmth right now.

    • 6
      patient-optimist388

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

  • 18
    swift-badger-336

    Two things can be true at the same time: you can grieve this man genuinely AND still take care of your own situation — the bills, the lost wages, all of it. Doing right by yourself financially doesn't mean you don't care about what happened to him. Don't let the emotional weight of this stop you from protecting yourself practically. His family will likely have their own legal process to deal with; you need yours.

  • 11
    warm-hare-942

    Just a heads up — the fact that the other driver passed doesn't mean insurance goes away. His policy is still in play, and their adjusters will still be looking to minimize what they pay out. Don't let the sympathy you feel for his family translate into you being soft with the insurance company. They are not grieving. They are calculating.

    • 9
      tired-passenger327

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

  • 11
    steady-stoat-924

    Worked claims for several years. When the at-fault driver is deceased, the file can actually get complicated fast — sometimes the family gets involved, sometimes there are questions about the estate, and the carrier may try to use the circumstances to slow-walk things or muddy liability. I've seen it happen. The 'he had a medical episode' angle especially — insurers sometimes try to use that to argue it was unforeseeable and limit exposure. Just something to be aware of. Doesn't mean you can't be a compassionate person AND know what's coming.

  • 10
    spry-marmot-915

    The fact that you're asking these questions — about who he was, about his family, about how to hold grief and your own pain at once — tells me you're already processing this in a really healthy way even if it doesn't feel like it. Some people shut down completely after trauma. You're feeling it. That's hard, but it's actually the way through.