The Shoulder
The Shoulder
60
sharp-wren-756

Teenager lost control and ended up IN my front yard — inches from where my kids play

Still kind of shaking as I write this, honestly.

I was in the kitchen making dinner when I heard this insane bang and crunch. Ran to the front window and there's a car sitting in my yard — bumper basically kissing my porch steps. The driver, looked like a teenager, had drifted off the road and gone right through my split-rail fence.

Here's what I can't stop thinking about: my two kids had been playing out front maybe 20 minutes earlier. 20 minutes. Their bikes were still on the grass literally 6 feet from where the car stopped. I keep running the math in my head and it makes me feel sick.

The kid was okay — shaken up, airbag went off, but he walked away. I'm glad about that, genuinely. He was polite and apologetic and clearly scared. I'm not trying to villainize him.

But now I'm dealing with:

  • A completely destroyed fence section
  • Tire ruts gouged deep into my lawn
  • Cracked porch step from debris
  • And honestly just... emotional whiplash? My hands won't stop trembling even a day later

His parents' insurance has been in touch and they're being cooperative so far, but I honestly don't know what I'm entitled to ask for. Property damage seems obvious — but what about the stress and the "what ifs"? Does any of that count for anything?

Has anyone dealt with something like this where no one was physically hurt but the psychological aftermath is very real? How did you handle the claim? Did you get a lawyer involved or just deal directly with insurance?

Would really appreciate hearing from people who've been through anything similar.

9replies

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9 replies

  • 14
    curious-marmot-517

    The shaking hands thing is so real. After a car jumped the curb near my house I felt "fine" for about 48 hours and then it just hit me all at once. Your nervous system is processing something genuinely scary even if no one bled. Don't dismiss that.

    • 15
      warm-hare-114

      Did the police come out? Is there an actual incident report filed? And do you know for sure that the teen's insurance is going to accept full liability — like, have they said that in writing yet? "Being cooperative" over the phone is very different from a formal acceptance of liability. Just want to make sure you're not getting ahead of yourself assuming this will be smooth.

  • 10
    mellow-elk-636

    Please be careful with how cooperative you are with his parents' insurance right now. "Being cooperative" from their side often means getting you to settle the property stuff fast and cheap before you've even figured out the full scope of damage. Get every single thing in writing and don't sign anything releasing claims until you're absolutely sure you've documented everything — including that porch and any landscaping.

  • 8
    cool-bison-422

    I used to work for an auto insurer and honestly the first offer on property damage is almost never the final number. Adjusters have targets. They're not evil people but they're also not working for you. Get at least two independent contractor quotes for the fence, the lawn ruts, and that cracked step before you agree to anything. The gap between their first offer and actual repair cost can be surprisingly wide on stuff like landscaping.

  • 7
    silent-newt-853

    Not legal advice, but — emotional distress as a standalone claim (no physical injury) varies a lot by state and by specific circumstances. It's worth at least a free consultation with a PI attorney just to understand what your options look like where you live. Most won't charge you anything to talk through the basics. The property damage piece is usually more straightforward, but don't let them bundle it all into one quick settlement before you understand the full picture.

  • 16
    bold-stoat-982

    What you're describing — the trembling, replaying the scenario, the "what ifs" — those are completely normal acute stress responses. If it's still happening a week or two out, or you're having trouble sleeping or feeling hypervigilant, please don't brush it off. That's worth mentioning to your doctor. It's also worth documenting for any claim, by the way — keep a little journal of how you're feeling day to day.

  • 14
    mellow-sparrow-466

    The 20-minute thing would haunt me too. I don't think you ever fully shake that kind of near-miss. Please just take care of yourself and don't feel like you have to rush through the insurance stuff right now. Give yourself a minute to breathe.

    • 4
      grounded-backseat229

      Adding this: keep copies of every email. It mattered for me.

  • 14
    hearty-crane-822

    Document everything before you fix anything. Photos of every tire rut, every inch of that fence, the cracked step, the bike positions — all of it. Timestamp the photos. Don't let anyone pressure you to clean it up quickly. Evidence disappears fast and you'll wish you had it later.