The Shoulder
The Shoulder
66
spry-crane-104

My truck took a brutal hit and still drove home — the other car got flatbedded

Still kind of in shock about what happened yesterday so bear with me.

I was sitting at a red light minding my own business when somebody blew through the intersection and caught my front passenger corner pretty hard. Like, hard hard. I heard this awful crunch and felt the whole cab shudder. My first thought was honestly that I was getting towed home.

Got out to look at the damage and yeah — it's ugly. Headlight assembly gone, bumper pushed back, some frame rail stuff I'm not even qualified to describe. But here's the thing: I climbed back in, started it up, and it drove. Pulled right into a shop about a mile away. No weird pulling, no warning lights, nothing catastrophic.

The other vehicle? Flatbed came and got it. Front end looked like a crushed soda can.

I know this isn't really a question post, I just needed to tell somebody because everyone around me is tired of hearing about it lol. But I do have a real concern underneath all this: the at-fault driver's insurance is already calling me and being weirdly friendly and fast about everything. That part is making me nervous more than the crash itself did.

Is it normal for them to reach out this quickly? Should I even be talking to them without knowing more about where I stand medically? I've got some neck stiffness that I'm hoping is nothing but I haven't seen a doctor yet.

TL;DR — truck survived what should've been a really bad day, I might not be fully okay, and the other side's insurance is already in my ear.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 21
    quiet-bison-480

    I used to be on that side of the phone. Quick outreach after a clear-liability crash is pretty standard — it looks good for their metrics and it puts them in contact with you before you lawyer up or fully understand your injuries. The friendliness is real and strategic at the same time. Don't give a recorded statement yet, especially if you haven't seen a doctor. Once you say 'I feel okay' on a recording that can follow you forever.

    • 20
      bold-raven-906

      Dude the truck thing is WILD. Mine got T-boned a couple years ago and I had the exact same experience — looked totaled, drove off the scene. The other car definitely didn't drive anywhere lol. Anyway, I ignored some body aches for about a week and really regretted it later when they turned into something the doctor said was 'consistent with whiplash.' Just get seen. For real.

  • 19
    patient-stoat-963

    That 'weirdly friendly and fast' feeling you're describing? Trust it. Adjusters are trained to get to you before you talk to anyone else, before you know how hurt you are, before you have a number in your head. The niceness is a tactic. You don't have to be rude to them but you also don't have to say anything substantive. 'I'm still assessing' is a complete sentence.

    • 4
      restless-offramp626

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 19
    mellow-kestrel-732

    Three things: 1) Don't give a recorded statement to the other driver's insurance. 2) See a doctor today or tomorrow, not next week. 3) Get your truck into a reputable body shop for a written estimate before anyone from insurance 'inspects' it and lowballs you. Do those three things and you're in a way better position than most people.

  • 16
    calm-marten-721

    Just so you know — you're under no legal obligation to speak with the at-fault party's insurance company at all, at least not right away. You do have to cooperate with your own insurer per your policy terms, but that's different. A lot of people don't realize that. If you have any suspicion you might pursue a claim, most PI attorneys offer free consultations and it's worth a call just to understand your options before you say anything that could be used against you.

  • 16
    gentle-seal-055

    Okay first I'm really glad you're (mostly) okay. Second — stop ignoring the neck thing, please. And third — I'd honestly just not answer the other insurance's calls for a few days until you've seen a doctor and figured out how you're actually feeling. There's no urgency on your end even if they make it seem that way.

    • 6
      weary-parent601

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

  • 7
    candid-marmot-630

    Please go get checked out before you decide the neck stiffness is 'probably nothing.' Soft tissue injuries from collisions — whiplash especially — can feel mild the first day or two while inflammation is still building. I've seen people feel almost fine at 24 hours and then wake up on day three barely able to turn their head. It's not about being dramatic, it's just how the physiology works. Go to urgent care or your primary care doc, describe the mechanism of injury, and get it documented.

  • 6
    silent-heron-809

    Did you get a police report filed at the scene? And do you know for sure the other driver's insurance is actually valid and active? Asking because 'fast and friendly' from an adjuster is one thing but I've also heard of situations where people assumed coverage existed and it... didn't. Worth confirming before you assume anything is straightforward here.