The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
Car accidentssteady-wren-556

Rear-ended at a stoplight, back is wrecked — what should I even expect here?

So I've been going back and forth about posting this but I genuinely don't know what to think anymore and need to hear from people who've actually been through something like this.

About six weeks ago I was just sitting at a red light on my way to work, completely stopped, when someone slammed into the back of my car. Hard. Like, I didn't even see it coming — just a massive jolt and then everything hurt.

Here's the thing though: I didn't go to the doctor right away. I kept telling myself it was just soreness and it'd pass in a few days. It didn't. It got worse. By the end of week two I could barely get out of bed. Bending over to tie my shoes is genuinely difficult now. Sitting at my desk for more than 20 minutes sends this shooting pain up my lower back. I've had to modify literally everything — how I sleep, how I shower, how I carry groceries. My partner has had to help me with stuff I should be able to do on my own and honestly that's been really hard emotionally too.

I finally went to the doctor and they referred me to physical therapy — looks like I'm looking at a few months of sessions minimum. The insurance adjuster has already called me twice and I honestly don't trust the vibe I'm getting from those conversations.

I guess what I'm wondering is:

  • Does waiting a couple weeks to seek treatment hurt my case badly?
  • Is a few months of PT "enough" in the eyes of an insurance company?
  • Should I even be talking to the adjuster without some kind of help?

I'm not trying to get rich off this. I just want my back to actually heal and not be stuck with bills for something that wasn't my fault.

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

  • 9
    warm-swift-209

    The waiting thing is SO common and insurance companies absolutely try to use it against you. I did the same thing after my accident — figured it was just muscle soreness. My adjuster literally brought up the gap in treatment in the first call like it was some kind of gotcha. Don't let them rattle you with that. Adrenaline masks pain, everyone knows that.

  • 13
    daring-grouse-971

    Please stop talking to that adjuster without some kind of representation or at least knowing your rights first. Those calls are not casual check-ins — they're recorded and they're looking for anything you say that minimizes your injuries or suggests you weren't that hurt. 'I'm feeling a little better' can come back to haunt you. I've seen it happen.

  • 9
    patient-vole-803

    I used to work on the insurance side and I can tell you honestly — the delay in treatment is something adjusters are trained to flag. It doesn't kill your case but they will factor it in when calculating what they think they can get away with offering you. The key is having solid medical documentation from this point forward that connects your current symptoms to the crash. Every appointment, every complaint, every limitation — get it in your records.

    • 0
      soft-spoken-backseat269

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

  • 18
    bold-grouse-478

    The fact that your pain is getting worse over time rather than improving is actually really important information. That's not nothing. A lot of soft tissue and spinal injuries don't fully declare themselves for days or even a couple weeks after impact. Please make sure you're telling your doctors everything — how it affects your sleep, your ability to sit, all of it. Vague 'my back hurts' doesn't build the same picture as specific functional limitations.

  • 22
    tidy-owl-388

    A couple of things worth knowing: (1) most PI attorneys offer free consultations and work on contingency, meaning you pay nothing unless they recover something for you. (2) You generally don't have to give the other driver's insurance a recorded statement — that's often optional and usually not in your favor to do early on. (3) Keep a daily log of your pain levels and what you can't do. It sounds tedious but it genuinely helps build a picture of how this accident affected your life.

    • 1
      quiet-neighbor174

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

  • 10
    spry-hare-314

    Not doubting your pain at all, but a few questions that will matter: Do you have the police report? Was the other driver clearly at fault and is that documented? And what does your own insurance situation look like — do you have MedPay or PIP coverage? Those details change the picture a lot.

  • 16
    quick-kestrel-637

    Don't settle anything until you're either fully recovered or your doctors say you've hit maximum medical improvement. That's the big one. People accept early offers and then realize months later they're still in pain and the case is closed. Once you sign, it's over.

  • 10
    swift-grouse-753

    The fact that you caught this at six weeks and you're already in PT is honestly better than a lot of people's situations. Some folks go months without any treatment and it creates much bigger problems — physically and legally. You're ahead of where you could be, and physical therapy genuinely works for a lot of back injuries if you stick with it.

    • 0
      kind-driver952

      How long did it end up taking in your case?

  • 6
    bold-marmot-675

    I just want to say the emotional side of this is so real and so overlooked. Having to rely on your partner for basic stuff is exhausting and humbling in a way that's hard to explain to people who haven't been there. I hope you're being gentle with yourself through this. It's a lot.