The Shoulder
The Shoulder
59
careful-fox-014

Walked away from a bad wreck last night but my brain won't stop looping — is this normal?

So this happened less than 24 hours ago and I'm still trying to process it. I was driving home from a late shift, totally routine, when a truck a few car lengths ahead of me suddenly lost something off its flatbed. I swerved hard to avoid it and my car went sideways across two lanes before I ended up spinning into a guardrail and finally stopping in a ditch. Airbags went off, windows gone, whole nine yards.

Here's the thing — I walked out. Scratches on my arm, a bruise forming on my collarbone from the seatbelt, but otherwise physically I feel almost too okay? Like my body is humming at some weird frequency.

The part messing with me is mental. Everything keeps shifting between feeling like I'm underwater and feeling like my thoughts are on fast-forward. My hands were shaking for hours. I keep replaying the moment of impact — not like a memory exactly, more like a physical sensation that just resets and plays again. When I try to distract myself it helps, but the second things get quiet it starts again.

I haven't even started thinking about the car, insurance, any of that. My roommate keeps telling me I need to call someone but I don't even know where to begin. Has anyone been through something like this? Does the looping replay eventually stop? And should I go see a doctor even if nothing obviously hurts? I feel kind of dumb going in and saying "I feel fine but weird."

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8 replies

  • 12
    curious-newt-588

    I went through almost the exact same thing after a bad side-impact last year. The looping replay is real and it is exhausting. For me it was worst in the first 48-72 hours and then slowly started fading. The 'humming too okay' feeling is your adrenaline still doing its thing — your body literally hasn't gotten the memo that the danger is over. You're not imagining it and you're not being dramatic.

  • 15
    cool-kestrel-593

    Please go get checked out, even if you feel physically fine. What you're describing — the time distortion, the replay loop, the jitteriness — those are classic acute stress responses, and they're real physiological events, not just you being anxious. Also, and I can't stress this enough: some injuries don't announce themselves for a day or two. Soft tissue stuff, concussion symptoms, internal bruising. A baseline exam now gives you documentation if anything shows up later. Don't talk yourself out of it because you feel 'okay.' Go.

  • 12
    cool-wren-676

    I just want to say I'm really glad you're here typing this. Please listen to your roommate and get seen. You don't have to have a bone sticking out to deserve medical attention after something like that.

    • 21
      wise-owl-634

      Jumping in because I used to be on the other side of these calls. The replay and time distortion thing you're describing? I heard it constantly from claimants and it never got easier to hear. From a pure documentation standpoint: write down everything you remember about the accident right now, while it's fresh. Road conditions, time, what you saw, what happened in sequence. Even just in your notes app. That account will matter more than you think later, and right now your memory is actually at its most accurate even though it doesn't feel that way.

  • 19
    calm-beaver-625

    Before you talk to any insurance company — yours or the truck's — please understand they are going to ask you how you feel, and whatever you say gets noted. Saying 'I feel fine' on a recorded call right after an accident can come back to bite you if symptoms develop later. Don't lie, obviously, but you are completely within your rights to say you're still being evaluated. Don't let them rush you into a recorded statement while you're still in this state.

  • 18
    sharp-wren-804

    Not legal advice, but two things stand out to me: (1) get that medical eval ASAP — a gap in treatment can complicate things later if you decide to pursue a claim, and (2) if there was cargo debris involved, liability questions can get more complex than a standard two-car situation. Worth at least a free consult with a PI attorney down the road once you're stable. Most work on contingency so there's no cost to ask questions.

  • 15
    cool-wren-335

    I know this feels like a lot right now, but you walked away. That matters. Give yourself permission to feel shaky and weird — you literally survived something scary. The fog does lift. Take it one hour at a time.

  • 13
    steady-stoat-568

    Three things, in order: doctor today (not tomorrow), write down what happened while it's fresh, don't post about this on any social media with your name attached. Everything else can wait. The insurance stuff, the car, all of it — none of it matters until you know you're physically okay.