The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
Car accidentskind-finch-782

T-boned at highway speed, somehow walked out — still can't process what happened

This was my first accident ever and I genuinely don't know how I'm still here typing this.

Long story short: I was merging onto the interstate when a truck drifted out of its lane and slammed into my driver's side door. The impact pushed me into the shoulder barrier and we ended up facing completely the wrong direction. I remember the airbags going off and then just… nothing for a few seconds.

By some miracle I didn't break anything major — just a badly fractured collarbone, a ton of deep bruising across my ribs, and the ER doctors are still monitoring some tingling and numbness in my right hand they think might be nerve-related. My car is totaled. I didn't even get to see it at the scene because EMS loaded me up immediately, and honestly when my sister finally texted me photos I wished she hadn't. The whole door is basically gone.

I know I wasn't at fault — the truck crossed the line, there were witnesses, and the officer noted it in the report. But I still feel weirdly guilty? Like survivor guilt or something. Nobody else was seriously hurt.

The insurance stuff is already starting and I have no idea what I'm doing. An adjuster called me literally the next morning while I was still on pain meds and wanted to go over what happened. Something about that felt really off to me but I wasn't sure if I was just being paranoid.

Has anyone else dealt with the emotional side of this on top of the physical recovery? I feel like I should be relieved but mostly I'm just shaken and anxious and can't sleep. Any advice — on literally any part of this — would mean a lot right now.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 5
    brave-grouse-416

    The guilt thing is so real and nobody talks about it. I walked away from a really bad wreck two years ago and kept apologizing to people for being upset, like I owed everyone gratitude 24/7 just because it could've been worse. Give yourself permission to feel shaken — your nervous system went through something traumatic regardless of the outcome.

    • 9
      silent-badger-113

      That adjuster calling you the morning after while you're still on pain meds is a HUGE red flag and honestly it's a pretty common move. They're hoping you'll say something minimizing — like 'I'm okay' or 'it wasn't that bad' — that they can use later to lowball you or dispute your claim. Do not give a recorded statement without talking to someone first. Seriously.

    • 15
      humble-bison-424

      Please take the numbness and tingling seriously and make sure you have a follow-up with a neurologist or at minimum your primary care doc, not just the ER. ER docs are incredible in a crisis but nerve involvement can evolve over days or weeks and you want that properly documented. Also — what you're describing emotionally sounds a lot like acute stress response. It's extremely normal after something like this. If the anxiety and sleep issues don't improve in a week or two, talk to someone.

    • 7
      steady-optimist864

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

  • 10
    hearty-elk-030

    I used to work claims and I'll be straight with you: early outreach like that isn't about helping you, it's about getting ahead of the file before you lawyer up or fully understand your injuries. The nerve stuff in your hand alone could turn into something significant down the road, and if you've already accepted a quick payout or made statements downplaying it, that's really hard to walk back. Just slow everything down.

    • 13
      keen-beaver-470

      Stop answering the adjuster's calls until you know what you're doing. You're not required to give a recorded statement. The nerve issue in your hand is a wildcard — could be nothing, could be something that affects your work or daily life for years. Don't settle anything until that picture is clearer.

    • 4
      curious-driver120

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 13
    brave-owl-148

    A few practical things: make sure you get a copy of the police report as soon as it's available — usually a few days after the incident. Start a simple notes document right now logging your symptoms daily, every doctor visit, every time you can't do something you normally could. That kind of record is surprisingly valuable later. And yes, most PI attorneys do free consultations, so there's no harm in at least having one conversation before you engage further with the adjuster.

  • 15
    curious-marmot-156

    I just want to say I'm really glad you're okay. Like genuinely. A T-bone at highway speed is terrifying and you're allowed to be a mess right now. Is there someone staying with you? Please don't try to handle all of this alone.

    • 9
      steady-wanderer941

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 11
    patient-kestrel-871

    You have witnesses AND it's in the police report that the truck crossed into your lane. That's honestly a much cleaner situation than a lot of people end up in. The path forward might feel overwhelming but at least you're not starting from a he-said-she-said mess. Focus on healing and let the documentation do the work.

  • 14
    brave-fox-723

    Not legal advice, but: the combination of a clear liability picture, documented injuries, and potential ongoing nerve issues is exactly the kind of situation where having at least a consultation with a personal injury attorney makes sense — just so you understand your options before you say anything more to the other driver's insurance. Most will talk to you for free. You don't have to hire anyone, just get informed.