The Shoulder
The Shoulder
64
kind-finch-224

Road debris sent my truck into a barrier — now I can't work and bills are burying me

I don't even know how to start this. About six weeks ago I was driving home from a long shift on the interstate when a piece of lumber — looked like it fell off a flatbed ahead of me — shot up under my truck. I swerved to avoid more of it, clipped the concrete divider, and bounced across two lanes before finally stopping against the guardrail on the shoulder. Another car rear-ended me during the chaos trying to stop in time.

I'm a courier. My whole income depends on being able to drive and physically load and unload packages. Right now I can't do either. My lower back and left shoulder took the worst of it — I've got a herniated disc the doctors confirmed on MRI and I'm in PT twice a week. Standing for more than a few minutes is agony. Sitting too long is agony. There's basically no position that isn't agony.

The flatbed didn't stop. Nobody got plates. I have one witness who pulled over — bless her — but she only got a partial on the truck and doesn't know the company name.

Here's where it gets worse:

  • My truck is totaled and the payout offer barely covers half of what I need to replace it
  • I'm behind on rent and my landlord is already sending notices
  • Medical bills are stacking up and I haven't even hit the specialist yet
  • I can't qualify for most temp work because I physically can't do it

I'm not sleeping. I'm barely eating. I feel like I'm drowning and the water keeps rising. Has anyone been in a situation like this — hit by debris from an unknown vehicle — and actually gotten somewhere? What did you do first? I feel completely lost.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 20
    humble-sparrow-005

    I went through something almost identical two years ago — lost load from a construction truck, I ended up in a ditch, driver never stopped. The partial witness info you have is actually more than I started with. An attorney I eventually talked to was able to track down the company through the witness description, DOT markings, and some traffic camera footage I didn't even know existed. Don't assume the missing plate is a dead end. It might not be.

  • 19
    steady-marten-752

    I just want to say — I'm so sorry. Reading this made my chest tight. You did nothing wrong and your whole life got flipped upside down in seconds. Please don't go through this alone. Is there anyone in your life who can help you stay on top of the paperwork side of this while you focus on healing? Sometimes just having someone make calls or organize bills helps when your brain is overwhelmed.

    • 8
      gentle-parent813

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

  • 15
    hearty-otter-844

    I know it probably doesn't feel like it right now, but you having that witness is genuinely significant. A lot of debris cases go nowhere because there's literally no lead at all. A partial ID, combined with the route, time, and type of vehicle, has cracked cases before. You're not starting from zero, even if it feels that way.

    • 7
      tired-neighbor859

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

  • 13
    wise-beaver-307

    The herniated disc combined with shoulder involvement is not a quick fix, I want to be real with you about that. Six weeks out you're still in the acute-to-subacute window. PT is the right call but make sure your treating physician is documenting everything — functional limitations, how it affects your ability to work, all of it. That documentation matters a lot down the line. Also, if you're not sleeping and barely eating, please mention that to your doctor too. The mental load of this kind of trauma is real and it needs to be in your medical record.

    • 14
      daring-kestrel-135

      Three things to do this week: (1) Write down every single detail you remember about that flatbed — color, approximate size, any markings, what direction it was headed, time of day. Memory fades fast. (2) Request the full accident report and check it for errors. (3) Talk to at least one personal injury attorney — most do free consultations and work on contingency so you pay nothing upfront. You can figure out if it's the right move after you hear what they say. Just get the information.

  • 9
    warm-wolf-506

    I used to work claims for a mid-size carrier. Here's the thing about that truck payout offer — the first number is almost never the real number. Adjusters are evaluated on how fast they close files and how low they go. That initial offer on your totaled vehicle is a starting point in a negotiation, not a final answer. Get independent comps for comparable trucks in your area and push back in writing. Also document EVERYTHING about your lost income as a courier — every day you can't work, write it down with specifics.

  • 8
    patient-marmot-073

    Not legal advice, but: uninsured/underinsured motorist coverage (UM/UIM) may be your best friend here if the flatbed is never identified. A lot of people don't realize their own policy can kick in when the at-fault driver is unknown or uninsured. Whether that applies depends on your specific policy language. Definitely worth having someone review it before you accept anything from your insurer. Also — do NOT give a recorded statement to any adjuster until you understand your options. Again, not legal advice, just really common stuff worth knowing.

    • 10
      gentle-elk-027

      Please please please don't trust your own insurance company to just take care of you here. Even your own insurer has a financial interest in closing your claim cheaply. Be careful what you say to them, get everything in writing, and don't let them pressure you into a quick settlement while you're still in active treatment. You don't even know the full extent of your injuries yet — a herniated disc can have a long recovery road.