The Shoulder
The Shoulder
46
clever-mole-977

Rolled my truck on a construction zone road and walked away — now terrified to ever drive again

This happened three days ago and I'm still shaking when I think about it.

I was heading home on a route I've driven a hundred times, but there was active construction — loose gravel scattered everywhere, temporary lane markings that made zero sense, and a shoulder that basically didn't exist anymore. I hit a patch of loose material, overcorrected, and the next thing I knew my truck was on its side in a drainage channel they'd partially dug out.

The truck is totaled. Both side windows gone, the cab twisted, airbags everywhere. I crawled out through the windshield. Walked away with bruised ribs and a nasty gash on my forearm that needed stitches — which honestly feels like a miracle given what the truck looked like afterward.

Here's the thing though: I can't stop replaying it. Every time I close my eyes I feel the wheels go out from under me. My partner offered to drive us to the grocery store yesterday and I had a full panic attack just sitting in the passenger seat. I had to get out and walk home.

I know logically that I need to get back behind the wheel eventually but right now that feels completely impossible. Like the idea of driving makes my chest close up.

Is this normal? Did anyone else go through this after a bad wreck? Does it actually get better or am I going to feel like this forever?

Also — not even sure who's at fault here. The road conditions were genuinely dangerous. Does that matter for anything insurance/legal wise or does it not make a difference since I was the one driving?

11replies

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11 replies

  • 20
    tidy-fox-165

    The fear after a bad crash is SO real and nobody talks about it enough. I had a bad wreck about two years ago — nothing as dramatic as yours but my car was totaled — and I genuinely couldn't drive on highways for almost four months. What helped me was starting tiny. Like, just sitting in a parked car with the engine off. Then engine on. Then driving one block. It sounds ridiculous but it actually worked. Your nervous system just got the scare of its life. Give it some grace.

  • 11
    tidy-wolf-973

    What you're describing — the replaying, the panic, the physical reaction just being near a car — that's a pretty textbook acute stress response after trauma. It doesn't mean something is permanently wrong with you. It means your brain is doing exactly what brains do after a life-threatening event.

    Please don't just push through and white-knuckle it. If this doesn't start easing up in the next week or two, or gets worse, talk to someone. A therapist who does trauma work (EMDR is really effective for this kind of thing) can make a huge difference. The physical injuries heal and so can this part — but you may need some support getting there.

    • 13
      genuine-grouse-754

      I just want to say — you crawled out through the windshield. Let that sink in. You're allowed to be shaken up. You're allowed to not be okay right now. Please be gentle with yourself. ❤️

  • 8
    mellow-badger-074

    On the legal/insurance question — DO NOT just assume it's all on you because you were the driver. Construction zones have standards they're supposed to meet, and if that road was genuinely hazardous because of how they set it up, there may be liability on someone else's end. Insurance adjusters LOVE when you accept full blame early. Don't say that to anyone official until you've at least talked to someone who knows what they're doing.

  • 19
    plain-marten-666

    Seconding the comment above. The question of whether a construction company or municipality bears any responsibility for unsafe road conditions is actually a real legal area — it's not some crazy stretch. A few things that matter: was there proper signage warning of the gravel/changed road surface? Were the temporary lane markings compliant with traffic control standards? Was the drainage work properly barricaded?

    If you haven't already, document everything. Photos of the scene if you can get back there, photos of your injuries, keep all your medical receipts. Even if you ultimately don't pursue anything, having documentation costs you nothing and losing it could cost you later.

  • 13
    plain-lynx-692

    Not legal advice, but: the scenario you're describing — loose construction material on a roadway, confusing temporary markings, an excavated shoulder — is exactly the kind of thing that gets investigated when someone asks whether the road itself contributed to a crash. Worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney before you sign anything with your insurance company. Most won't charge you anything to hear the facts.

    • 8
      curious-wanderer600

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

  • 17
    curious-marmot-226

    You walked away. With bruised ribs and stitches. From a rollover into a construction trench. I don't say this to minimize how awful it was — I say it because that fact matters. Your body is intact. Your brain is doing the hard work of processing something terrifying. That fear you feel? It's proof your survival instincts are working perfectly. Healing from this — mentally and physically — is absolutely possible.

    • 1
      weary-optimist307

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 9
    mellow-owl-261

    Two separate issues here and you should treat them separately.

    1. The driving fear is normal, it will very likely get better, but don't just wait and hope — actively work on it. Therapy, gradual exposure, whatever. Avoidance makes it worse over time.

    2. Don't close the door on the road conditions question until you've gotten a real answer. Talk to a personal injury attorney before you settle anything. Most do free consults. You've got nothing to lose by making one phone call.

    • 7
      curious-commuter519

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