The Shoulder
The Shoulder
57
clear-hare-175

My passenger didn't make it. I walked out with bruises. I don't know how to feel.

I've been sitting on this for a few weeks now and I finally need to put it somewhere because I can't keep going in circles in my head.

We were driving back from a late concert — my coworker was behind the wheel, I was shotgun. Some guy blew through a red light at an intersection doing what witnesses said was probably double the speed limit. Hit us on the driver's side. Full impact.

I remember the sound. Then nothing. Then I was standing on the curb — I genuinely have no memory of getting out of the car — and there were already sirens. Someone had a hand on my shoulder telling me to sit down. I kept saying I was fine. I wasn't fine, I had a gash on my forearm and two cracked ribs, but compared to what happened to my coworker… I felt nothing.

She passed away at the hospital that night. I didn't find out until the next morning.

I've been out of work. I went to a few therapy sessions but I keep feeling like I'm "wasting" the therapist's time because physically I'm mostly healed now. Like I don't deserve to still be struggling when she's just gone.

Has anyone else been in something like this? Where you're technically the "lucky" one and somehow that makes everything harder? I don't even know what I'm asking. I just needed to say it out loud somewhere.

Also — there are insurance and possibly legal things happening in the background that I'm not even emotionally ready to deal with yet. If anyone has been through that process after losing someone in the same crash, I'd really appreciate knowing what that looked like.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 20
    swift-badger-836

    The insurance stuff will come at you faster than you're ready for, just a heads up. Adjusters are trained to move quickly while people are still in shock — it makes it easier to lowball or close out claims. If you haven't already, at least consult with a PI attorney before signing or agreeing to anything. Most do free consultations. You don't have to commit to anything, but knowing your options protects you.

  • 19
    quick-vole-296

    I know 'silver lining' sounds hollow right now and I'm not going to pretend otherwise. But the fact that you're naming this, writing it out, reaching out — that's not nothing. A lot of people go completely inward after something like this and never say a word to anyone. You're already doing something brave by putting it into words.

    • 4
      kind-passenger847

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 17
    spry-seal-515

    When you're ready to deal with the legal side — no pressure, you don't have to rush — just know that as someone injured in the same crash, you likely have your own separate claim, independent of whatever is happening with your coworker's family. The at-fault driver's liability coverage would potentially apply to you both, but the claims are handled individually. One thing I'd flag: if anyone from an insurance company (yours or theirs) has already called you, try not to give a recorded statement without at least talking to an attorney first. Not telling you what to do, just something to be aware of.

  • 8
    clever-badger-513

    I worked claims for years and I want to echo what others are saying about the legal piece. Emotional distress and trauma are compensable damages — but only if they're documented. Keep going to therapy, and make sure your sessions are being recorded somewhere in your medical file. I've seen people settle without accounting for the psychological side and regret it later. On the human side: what you're carrying is heavy and legitimate. I'm sorry you're in this.

    • 8
      restless-road-soul502

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

    • 9
      weary-traveler240

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

  • 6
    keen-grouse-916

    Two things: First, guilt is not the same as fault. You did not cause this. Second — and I say this gently — 'a few sessions' of therapy for what you went through is nowhere near enough. This isn't a sprained ankle. Give it real time and real effort before you decide it's not helping. You owe yourself that much.

    • 9
      calm-parent504

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

  • 5
    clear-crane-261

    I was the only one who walked away from a two-car crash that killed someone in the other vehicle — a complete stranger, and it still wrecked me for over a year. The guilt you're describing, that feeling of 'why me,' is so real and so exhausting. Please don't stop the therapy. You are not wasting anyone's time. That's literally what they're there for. Sending you a lot of love right now.

    • 15
      hearty-wolf-776

      What you're describing has a name — survivor's guilt — and it's a recognized trauma response, not a personal failing. The fact that your physical injuries are healing doesn't mean your nervous system has caught up. Trauma doesn't run on a schedule. A therapist who specializes in trauma or PTSD (specifically EMDR, if you haven't tried it) can be really different from general talk therapy. It targets exactly this kind of thing. Please don't measure your right to heal against anyone else's outcome.

    • 5
      clever-dove-644

      I don't have any experience with accidents or legal stuff, I just want you to know that reading this made me tear up. You're not "too fine" to be struggling. You lost someone. That matters regardless of what your body went through. I hope you keep talking about it, here or anywhere.