The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsdaring-bison-632

Survived a crash where someone didn't make it — the thoughts just won't quit

I don't even know how to start this so I'm just going to type it out.

About three months ago I was in a pretty brutal intersection collision. The other driver didn't survive. I walked away with a cracked rib and some soft tissue stuff in my neck, which honestly feels almost embarrassing to admit given what happened to them.

Physically I'm mostly okay now. But mentally? There's this thing that happens where I'll just be doing something completely normal — making coffee, sitting in traffic, whatever — and it's just there. The whole scene. It's not like I'm crying or having a breakdown. It's more like a film clip that plays on a loop in the background of my brain whether I want it to or not.

I know I need to talk to someone and I've actually got an intake appointment scheduled with a therapist who apparently specializes in trauma. So that's in motion.

What I'm really wondering is if anyone else has been through something like this — surviving something where the outcome was so different for someone else in that same moment. The guilt thing is weird because logically I know the crash wasn't my fault (the other driver ran a red light). But logic doesn't seem to talk to whatever part of my brain keeps replaying it.

Does it get quieter? Did anything help you in the meantime while you were waiting for therapy to actually kick in? Sleep has been rough and I kind of dread long drives now even though I have to do them for work.

Just looking for people who get it, I guess.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 10
    silent-marmot-772

    I went through something similar about two years ago — wasn't exactly the same situation but someone was seriously hurt in my crash and didn't recover well. That loop you're describing, the random playback, that was my life for months. What helped me most before therapy really got going was honestly just naming it out loud. Like literally saying 'there's the loop again' instead of trying to fight it. Sounds dumb but it gave me a tiny bit of distance from it. Hang in there. It does get quieter.

    • 0
      tired-optimist760

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

  • 15
    steady-stoat-763

    What you're describing sounds a lot like intrusive thoughts, which are super common after traumatic events — your nervous system is basically stuck in a processing loop. It doesn't mean something is 'wrong' with you, it means something intense happened. The fact that you're already lined up with a trauma-informed therapist is genuinely the right move. In the meantime, some people find grounding techniques helpful when the loop starts — like focusing hard on physical sensations in the present moment (cold glass in your hand, feet on the floor). Not a cure, just a way to interrupt the replay sometimes.

    • 6
      calm-rider998

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 5
    cool-vole-575

    I just want to say — the fact that you're talking about this at all takes guts. Don't minimize what you went through just because your physical injuries healed. You were in a fatal crash. That's enormous. Be kind to yourself while you're working through it.

    • 1
      gentle-survivor331

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

  • 15
    cool-swan-366

    You scheduled the therapy appointment AND you're reaching out to people. That's two things you didn't have to do but did anyway. I know it doesn't feel like much but honestly those two moves are what start turning things around. The sleep stuff and the driving anxiety usually respond really well to trauma-focused therapy once you get into the rhythm of it.

    • 5
      careful-driver413

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 6
    keen-badger-937

    Real talk — the guilt you feel even when it wasn't your fault is one of the most common things people don't expect after a crash. Survivor's guilt has no interest in logic. It doesn't care who ran the light. A good therapist will have seen this a hundred times, so don't waste energy being embarrassed about it in your session. Just dump all of it on them, that's what they're there for.

  • 22
    mellow-finch-160

    Not legal advice, but I'll just mention — if you haven't already, keep a brief daily journal of how you're feeling, the sleep issues, the driving anxiety, any days you had to miss work or cut things short because of mental state. Emotional distress and psychological impact are real parts of a personal injury claim and they're a lot easier to document when you're tracking them in real time rather than trying to reconstruct later. Doesn't have to be long, just honest notes.

  • 16
    gentle-crow-567

    Just a heads up — if you're still dealing with the insurance side of things, be careful what you say to adjusters about your mental and emotional state. They will use 'I'm doing okay' or 'I'm mostly recovered' to lowball or close your claim faster than you'd expect. You don't have to lie, just don't volunteer more than you need to.

    • 5
      weary-driver383

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 8
    brave-stoat-080

    How far out is your therapy intake? I ask because 'scheduled' and 'actually being seen' can sometimes be weeks or months apart depending on availability. If there's a significant wait, it might be worth asking if there's a cancellation list or looking into whether your area has any trauma support groups that meet in person or online in the meantime. Waiting alone with this stuff is rough.