The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Car accidentsclever-marmot-531

Walked away from a bad crash physically fine but my brain is completely falling apart

This is going to sound strange so bear with me.

About two weeks ago I got T-boned at an intersection by someone who ran a red light going full speed. My car was totaled. I somehow didn't break a single bone — the ER docs said I was incredibly lucky. A few bruises, some soreness, and that was it physically.

But mentally? I am not okay and I don't fully understand what's happening to me.

The obvious stuff I kind of expected — I flinch every time I hear tires screech, I've been having trouble sleeping, and I had a mini panic attack just sitting in the passenger seat of my sister's car last weekend. That part makes sense to me.

What I did NOT expect is that the anxiety seems to be bleeding into every corner of my life that has nothing to do with driving. I'm suddenly convinced my landlord is trying to scam me somehow (he's been totally normal and fine for three years). I've been snapping at my coworkers over tiny things. I started crying yesterday because I thought my cat was acting "differently" and convinced myself something was wrong with her. She was just sleepy.

The weirdest part is I've started doubting really close friendships — like suddenly suspicious of people I've known for years with zero reason. It's like my threat-detection system got completely fried and now everything feels like a danger.

Has anyone else had the mental fallout from an accident spill over into totally unrelated parts of their life like this? I feel like I'm going crazy and I can't find much about this specific experience online. Also wondering if this kind of psychological impact is something that matters for an insurance claim — I haven't talked to anyone about the legal side yet.

12replies

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12 replies

  • 22
    clever-stoat-352

    Not legal advice, but for what it's worth — psychological injury following a traumatic accident is well-recognized legally. Courts and insurers deal with PTSD and anxiety claims regularly. What hurts those claims is gaps in treatment or undocumented symptoms. So the most important thing you can do right now, both for your own recovery and for any future claim, is get into professional care and keep showing up. Talk to a personal injury attorney before engaging with any insurance company on the liability side — most offer free consultations.

  • 21
    daring-wolf-267

    Three things: 1) See a therapist who specializes in trauma, not just a general one. EMDR specifically has really good results for accident-related PTSD. 2) Don't make any big life decisions — about friendships, your job, anything — for at least 60 days if you can help it. Your brain is not giving you accurate reads right now. 3) Talk to a PI attorney before you do anything with insurance. That's it. That's the whole playbook right now.

  • 16
    keen-newt-272

    Do NOT downplay the mental health stuff when you talk to any insurance adjuster. They love to frame emotional impacts as "minor" or "temporary" and low-ball accordingly. If you're struggling this much two weeks out, you have no idea what two months looks like — and settling early locks you in. Please don't sign anything yet.

    • 8
      steady-dreamer448

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 15
    hearty-seal-201

    I just want to say I'm really glad you're still here. You walked away from something that could have been so much worse and your brain is still processing that — of course it's going haywire. Please be gentle with yourself. And maybe give the people close to you a heads-up that you're going through it, so they understand if you seem distant or on edge. You don't have to go through this alone.

    • 9
      curious-commuter649

      Did you have to escalate, or did they come around after the first ask?

  • 10
    genuine-newt-692

    I know it doesn't feel like it right now, but the fact that you're aware something is off is actually a really good sign. A lot of people push this stuff down and it comes out sideways for years. You're already asking the right questions. That self-awareness is going to help you get through this faster than you might think.

    • 7
      quiet-fox-436

      Quick question — have you actually been evaluated by a doctor beyond the ER visit? Sometimes "no broken bones" doesn't catch everything, and some physical things like a concussion or even whiplash affecting your nervous system can absolutely cause mood and cognitive changes. Before assuming it's purely psychological, it might be worth a follow-up with your regular doctor just to rule stuff out.

    • 9
      patient-passenger766

      Seconding this. The same approach worked for me last year.

  • 7
    curious-vole-777

    Yes. One thousand percent yes. After my accident last year I became convinced my best friend was lying to me about something — I could not tell you what, there was zero evidence, I just felt it. Took me a few months to realize my nervous system was basically stuck in red-alert mode and casting suspicion everywhere. You are not going crazy. Your brain went through something terrifying and it's trying to protect you from all threats now, real or imagined. It levels out, but it takes time and probably some real support to get there.

    • 15
      cool-raven-766

      What you're describing sounds really consistent with an acute stress response, and it can absolutely spill into every area of life — not just driving. When your body experiences a genuine life-threatening moment, your stress hormones go haywire and your nervous system doesn't just snap back to baseline because the physical danger is gone. The hypervigilance, the mistrust, the emotional volatility — those are all your brain trying to stay safe. Please talk to your primary care doctor or ask for a referral to a therapist who works with trauma. This is real and it's treatable, but you shouldn't try to white-knuckle through it alone.

    • 22
      clever-crow-621

      Just chiming in on your question about whether this matters for a claim — yes, psychological and emotional distress after an accident is absolutely something that can be part of a personal injury claim. It's often called "pain and suffering" and it includes mental anguish, anxiety, and trauma-related impacts on your daily life. The key is documenting it: see a mental health professional and be honest with them about everything you're experiencing and when it started. Those records matter. I'd suggest at least consulting with a PI attorney before you talk much with the other driver's insurance — not legal advice, just process stuff.