The Shoulder
The Shoulder
54
Car accidentsbold-owl-244

Walked away 'fine' from my crash but mentally I'm falling apart — does this ever get better?

It happened about three weeks ago. Intersection collision, middle of the afternoon, completely out of nowhere. The other driver ran a red and hit me on the driver's side. Physically, I came out of it with some bruising and a stiff neck — nothing broken, nothing that landed me in the hospital. My car is repairable. On paper, I got lucky.

But I cannot stop replaying it. Every single night I wake up either mid-nightmare or just drenched in sweat for no reason I can name. I flinch at yellow lights now. I took the long way to work twice this week just to avoid that intersection, and I almost called in sick both days because getting in the car at all felt like too much.

The people around me keep saying things like "at least you're okay!" or making little jokes about me being a bad driver (I was not at fault — at all). I know they probably mean well but it genuinely makes me want to disappear from every family group chat forever.

I've dealt with hard stuff before in my life, but something about this feels like it's sitting differently in my body. Like I can't shake it loose no matter what I do.

I guess I'm just asking — does it actually get easier? Has anyone else felt this way after an accident where you were technically "fine"? How long did it take before you felt like yourself again? I don't even know who to talk to about this.

13replies

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13 replies

  • 24
    spry-hare-824

    I could have written this almost word for word six months ago. My accident was minor by most measures too — fender bender on the highway, airbags didn't even go off — but I was a wreck for weeks afterward. The intersection avoidance, the sleep stuff, the replaying it over and over... all of it. What actually helped me was finding a therapist who specifically works with trauma, not just general anxiety. A few sessions in I started to feel like I had some tools instead of just white-knuckling through every day. It does get better, but I don't think it just fades on its own for everyone. You might need a little help moving it through.

    • 3
      calm-survivor442

      Really glad you posted an update — gives the rest of us some hope.

    • 1
      plainspoken-late-shift875

      This thread is gold. Thanks everyone.

  • 21
    spry-owl-728

    What you're describing — the hypervigilance, sleep disruption, avoidance behaviors, the physical stress response — those are really textbook signs of acute stress reaction, which can develop into PTSD if it goes unaddressed. The frustrating thing is that people around you see 'no broken bones' and think you're completely okay, but your nervous system doesn't work that way. It experienced a threat and it's still trying to protect you from it. Please don't brush this off as just being dramatic. Talking to your doctor or a trauma-informed counselor sooner rather than later makes a real difference in how this resolves. You're not broken — your brain is doing exactly what brains do after scary things happen.

  • 17
    tidy-lynx-913

    The family joke thing would drive me absolutely insane, I'm sorry. People who weren't in that car have no idea what it actually felt like. You don't owe anyone a 'I'm fine' smile.

  • 17
    daring-kestrel-979

    I know 'it gets better' can sound hollow when you're in the thick of it, so I'll just say this: the fact that you're naming what you're feeling and reaching out is already something. A lot of people just shut down or numb out. The people I've seen bounce back faster are the ones who didn't pretend they were okay when they weren't. You're already doing that.

  • 16
    careful-lynx-253

    Two practical things: First, talk to your doctor and specifically use the words 'I'm having trouble sleeping, I'm avoiding driving, and I keep reliving the crash.' That framing matters for getting the right referral. Second, if the other driver was at fault, any treatment you get for psychological impact — therapy, medication, whatever — can be part of a claim. Keep records of everything, including how this is affecting your work and daily life. Not saying that's the priority right now, just don't assume mental health costs are yours to eat alone.

    • 1
      honest-passenger291

      Going through something similar right now. Did following up actually move the needle for you?

    • 3
      weathered-overpass138

      Took me three tries but they finally budged. Don't give up.

  • 12
    humble-heron-979

    Just want to flag — if you're dealing with the other driver's insurance, be very careful about giving recorded statements or signing anything that closes out your claim before you fully understand how you're doing. Psychological injury is real and compensable but adjusters are not going to bring it up or help you document it. They want this file closed fast.

    • 4
      soft-spoken-mile-marker615

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 10
    steady-kestrel-652

    Seconding what others said about documentation. Start a simple daily journal — nothing fancy, even voice memos work — noting how you slept, whether you drove, what triggered anxiety, if you missed work or social things because of this. If there's ever a claim that includes emotional distress, that contemporaneous record is genuinely valuable. And the journal itself can help your therapist too, so it's useful either way.

  • 20
    humble-fox-639

    Genuine question, not trying to be harsh: have you actually told anyone in your life how bad it's gotten, or are you keeping most of this to yourself? Sometimes the people making jokes genuinely don't know it's this serious. Might be worth one real conversation before writing them off — or at least figuring out if there's one person in your circle who can actually show up for you right now.