The Shoulder
The Shoulder
67
Car accidentsgentle-tern-509

Walked away from a bad crash last week and honestly struggling more than I expected

So I was driving home from a late shift about a week ago when someone ran a red light and hit me pretty hard on the passenger side. Airbags went off, car is totaled, but physically I'm mostly okay — some neck stiffness and a bruised shoulder that I'm getting checked out.

Here's the thing nobody warned me about: the emotional side of this is wrecking me more than the physical stuff. I keep replaying the sound of the impact. I'll be fine and then suddenly I'm back in that intersection. I cried in the grocery store parking lot yesterday because I didn't want to pull out into traffic.

I also have this weird guilt even though the other driver clearly ran the light — there were witnesses and a traffic cam. Like rationally I know it wasn't my fault but I still keep thinking what if I'd left work five minutes later or what if I'd taken a different route.

I'm handling the insurance stuff, I've got an appointment set up with a lawyer through here which I appreciate. The practical side feels manageable. It's the mental part that's got me sideways.

Has anyone else felt this way after a crash that wasn't even their fault? Does this get better? I feel kind of embarrassed even posting this because everyone keeps saying "you're so lucky you walked away" and I know that's true but I don't feel lucky right now, I just feel shaky and weird and not like myself.

Any words from people who've been through something similar would mean a lot right now.

11replies

Not sure what your claim is worth?

AskMatlock can connect you with an independent injury lawyer for a free case check — no pressure, no cost to start.

Check my case

0 / 4000 · posted under a randomly assigned handle

11 replies

  • 19
    patient-beaver-657

    Not legal advice, but the psychological impact of a crash — anxiety, sleep issues, fear of driving — can absolutely be part of a personal injury claim. It's called pain and suffering and it's legitimate. Keep a simple journal, even just a few lines a day about how you're feeling and what symptoms you're having. That kind of contemporaneous record is surprisingly useful. Glad you're getting some support here.

    • 5
      curious-rider202

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

  • 16
    humble-lynx-684

    The grocery store parking lot thing hit me hard because I did the exact same thing outside a gas station. Sat there for like 20 minutes before I could make myself pull out. It does get better. It just takes longer than people expect and that's okay.

  • 12
    gentle-lynx-982

    Oh man, I could have written this myself about eight months ago. Different crash, same exact emotional spiral. The 'what if I left earlier' loop is SO real and it makes zero logical sense but your brain just won't stop. For me it lasted a few weeks and then slowly started fading. Gave myself permission to just feel bad about it instead of fighting the feeling and that actually helped weirdly. You're not broken, this is just what trauma does.

    • 11
      curious-hare-029

      What you're describing — the replaying, the hypervigilance in parking lots, the feeling of being disconnected from yourself — those are really common acute stress responses after a traumatic event. Your nervous system basically got a massive shock and it takes time to regulate back down. Please don't brush it off. If it's still happening at the 3-4 week mark or getting worse, genuinely consider talking to someone. A lot of therapists specialize specifically in accident-related trauma and it doesn't take long to make a real difference.

    • 9
      kind-hare-705

      The 'you should feel lucky' thing people say is so well-meaning and so unhelpful at the same time 😞 You're allowed to feel shaken up. Something scary happened to you! Being physically okay doesn't mean you have to be emotionally okay on anyone else's timeline.

    • 4
      mellow-sidewalk714

      Following up on this — any update on how it turned out?

  • 12
    keen-hare-994

    The fact that you're aware enough to name what you're feeling and reach out — that's actually a really good sign. Some people just bottle it completely and it comes out sideways later. You're already doing the right thing by not pretending you're fine.

  • 12
    curious-grouse-071

    Make sure whatever you're going through emotionally gets documented with a doctor. I know that sounds cold when you're just trying to feel better, but emotional distress and things like anxiety or sleep disruption after an accident are real medical things that can be part of your claim. Tell your doctor everything, not just the shoulder.

    • 6
      calm-driver590

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 10
    spry-elk-081

    Quick heads up — if the other driver's insurance contacts you wanting a recorded statement about how you're doing, do NOT casually say you're 'fine' or 'doing okay.' Adjusters are trained to get those words on record early, before the full picture of your recovery is clear. Even the emotional and psychological stuff can matter later. Just be careful.