The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsmellow-tern-947

Still having flashback dreams months after my crash — does this ever stop?

I don't really know how to start this so I'll just say it. I was in a pretty bad wreck back in the spring — another driver ran a red light and slammed into my driver's side door. Airbags, glass, the whole thing. I walked away with some injuries but nothing life-threatening, so everyone around me keeps saying I should feel "lucky."

And I do feel lucky, I guess. But that hasn't stopped the nightmares.

Almost every night I'm back in that intersection. I can hear the tires screeching, feel the impact, see the hood crumpling. Sometimes I wake up gasping and I have to sit there in the dark for like 20 minutes just reminding myself I'm okay. My partner tries to help but they don't really get it — they weren't there.

Daytime isn't always better either. I'll be driving and a car will cut across an intersection and my whole body just locks up. Heart pounding, hands sweating, the works.

I haven't talked to a doctor about it because honestly I didn't think it was a "real" medical thing. Like, I kept telling myself to just get over it. But it's been months and it's not going away on its own.

Has anyone else gone through this after a crash? Did it eventually get better? Did you do anything specific that helped — therapy, medication, anything? I'm exhausted and I just want my brain to let me sleep again.

Also — does this kind of thing (the psychological aftermath, not just the physical injuries) factor into anything if you're dealing with an insurance claim? Just wondering.

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9 replies

  • 22
    warm-grouse-481

    I could have written this myself, honestly. After my rear-end collision two years ago I had the same thing — waking up in a cold sweat, flinching every time someone merged too fast near me. What finally helped me was EMDR therapy. I know it sounds weird but it's specifically designed for traumatic memories and it made a real difference. It didn't make the memory disappear, it just... stopped feeling like it was happening right now. Please don't wait as long as I did to reach out to someone.

  • 18
    candid-owl-814

    Two things you need to do, in order: (1) Make a doctor's appointment this week — not next month, this week. Tell them exactly what you told us. (2) Stop driving alone through that intersection until you've had at least a few therapy sessions. You're not ready and that's okay, but don't force yourself back into the trigger before you have some tools. Everything else can wait.

  • 16
    mellow-lynx-702

    On the insurance side, be careful. If you start talking to an adjuster about your symptoms without any documentation behind it, they can minimize it or just ignore it entirely. Get into therapy first so there's an actual paper trail. Adjusters are trained to treat undocumented claims like they don't exist.

  • 14
    sharp-seal-548

    What you're describing sounds a lot like PTSD or at least acute stress response, and I want you to know — it is absolutely a real medical thing. Your nervous system went through something terrifying and it's stuck in a kind of protective loop. It doesn't just resolve on its own for a lot of people. Please talk to your primary care doctor and specifically mention the sleep disruption and the daytime triggers. They can refer you to someone who specializes in trauma. You are not being dramatic. This is your body asking for help.

  • 10
    warm-raven-919

    The fact that you reached out here instead of just suffering in silence says a lot. Please be gentle with yourself — "just get over it" is not a thing that works for stuff like this and you shouldn't have to white-knuckle your way through it alone. 💙

    • 15
      clever-seal-274

      To answer your question about insurance claims — psychological injuries like PTSD and anxiety disorders are recognized as legitimate damages in personal injury cases, not just broken bones. Emotional distress can be part of what's called "pain and suffering." That said, documentation matters enormously, so seeing a mental health professional isn't just good for your wellbeing — it creates a record. Not legal advice, just something worth knowing.

  • 10
    sharp-stoat-667

    Spent years on the claims side and I can confirm — psychological injuries without supporting documentation almost never get taken seriously internally. That's not right, but it's the reality. A diagnosis from a licensed therapist or psychologist changes the conversation completely. If you're still in the claims process, don't sign anything releasing your claim until you've had time to actually address the mental health piece. Once you sign, it's done.

    • 8
      hopeful-rider852

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

  • 9
    humble-swift-807

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that you're naming what's happening — the nightmares, the daytime anxiety, the exhaustion — means you're already ahead of a lot of people who just bury it and wonder why they feel terrible for years. You've identified the problem. That's actually step one. The path forward exists, you just haven't found it yet.