The Shoulder
The Shoulder
53
warm-mole-099

Survived a rollover yesterday and my brain won't stop replaying it — is this normal?

I'm still kind of in shock writing this so bear with me.

I was driving to meet a friend for breakfast yesterday morning when I hit a patch of black ice on an overpass. My car spun, clipped the guardrail, and rolled. I honestly don't know how many times. When it stopped I was upside down, hanging in my seatbelt, and the whole roof was caved in on the passenger side.

I got out with a gash on my forearm, some bruised ribs, and a mild concussion. That's it. The car is absolutely destroyed. The first responders on scene kept saying things like "you should not be okay right now" and that did NOT help my mental state lol.

I'm 24, I live alone, and my family is a few states away. They keep saying things like "someone was watching over you" and I don't really share those beliefs, so I don't know how to receive that. I'm grateful, genuinely. But I also feel weirdly guilty? Like why did I get to walk away from something that looks like that.

The worst part is I can't sleep. Every time I close my eyes I'm back in the car, and I wake up with my heart going absolutely insane. My hands were shaking for most of today. I have a follow-up with a doctor tomorrow but I wanted to ask here — did anyone else feel like this after a bad crash? How long did it last? Did it get better?

Also trying to figure out the insurance and next-steps stuff but honestly that feels like a problem for future-me. Right now I just need to know I'm not losing my mind.

14replies

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14 replies

  • 10
    bright-fox-759

    The replaying thing is SO real. After my accident I couldn't drive past the intersection where it happened for months without my whole body going into panic mode. What you're describing — the shaking, the heart racing at night, waking up back in it — that's your nervous system doing exactly what nervous systems do after something traumatic. It doesn't mean you're broken. It took me probably six or seven weeks before I started sleeping normally again, and I had some help getting there. You're not losing your mind. Not even close.

    • 24
      mellow-crow-945

      What you're describing sounds like a really classic acute stress response, and I want you to know that is a completely legitimate medical thing, not just "being dramatic" or "in your head." When you see your doctor tomorrow, please tell them about the sleep disruption and the intrusive replaying — use those exact words. Don't just mention the physical stuff. They may want to refer you to someone, and that referral can actually be documented as part of your injury record too, which matters. Also drink a lot of water today. Adrenaline crashes are brutal on the body.

    • 0
      soft-spoken-road-soul430

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

    • 3
      calm-neighbor540

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

  • 5
    tidy-tern-921

    I just want to say I'm so glad you're here and that you reached out somewhere, even if it's just an internet forum full of strangers. Please don't be alone with this if you can help it — is there anyone who can come stay with you for a few days, or that you can go stay with? The alone-at-night part worries me a little. 💙

    • 10
      weary-dreamer111

      Thanks for sharing. Hope things are getting a little easier for you.

  • 9
    wise-elk-839

    I know you said insurance is future-you's problem and honestly that's fair, take care of yourself first. But one small thing: if your insurance company or the other party's insurer tries to call you in the next day or two, you are NOT required to give a recorded statement right now. You just survived a rollover and have a concussion. Anything you say while you're still in shock can be used to minimize your claim later. You can just say you're under medical care and will be in touch when you're able.

    • 0
      careful-traveler684

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

  • 13
    clear-dove-517

    Not legal advice, but just so you know — the psychological aftermath of a crash (what you're describing with the sleep issues, the flashbacks, the anxiety) can absolutely be part of a personal injury claim if someone else's negligence was involved. Road conditions, maintenance liability, other drivers — there are a lot of factors. The guilt you feel about "walking away" doesn't erase the real harm done to you. Document everything you're experiencing, even in a notes app. And take care of yourself first. The legal stuff can wait a week.

  • 12
    quick-wolf-384

    I know this might sound weird but the fact that you're HERE asking questions and processing it means something. A lot of people after bad crashes just white-knuckle through and never deal with it, and it haunts them for years. You're already doing the right thing by not just pushing it down. That counts for something.

    • 2
      weary-parent658

      That lines up with what my adjuster told me too.

  • 7
    daring-finch-383

    Three things: 1) Tell your doctor ALL of it tomorrow, the sleep stuff especially. 2) Take photos of every single bruise and mark on your body before they fade — do it today. 3) Don't sign anything from any insurance company until you've had at least a conversation with a PI attorney, most of them do free consults. The adrenaline and the concussion are going to make you want to just close this chapter fast. Don't.

    • 1
      grounded-overpass471

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

  • 20
    humble-sparrow-940

    Do you know yet what actually caused the spin? Like was it purely the ice, or were there other factors — worn tires, road wasn't treated, another vehicle involved? I ask because that changes a lot about what options you might have. Either way hope you feel more yourself soon.