I was in a car accident a few days ago. There was a stopped car in the interstate and I didn't see it in advance; the car in front of me swerved into another lane and then there it was in front of me. I also swerved but damaged my commuter car, which is old and had many miles on it. The insurance company declared it a total loss.
The damage was where I scraped along the passenger side of my car (and the driver side of the stopped car). I had no deployment of airbags and no damage from my seat belt; no glass on either car broke, so it was a glancing blow if that makes sense. The front passenger wheel was damaged and I could not drive the car very far.
I pulled over to the shoulder and dialed 911. A state trooper made sure I was alright and proceeded to take care of the situation. I was moving slowly, aware that I had had a shock to my system and trying not to do anything to worsen the situation (stepping into traffic when I exited my vehicle, etc.)
The trooper took my information for his report and arranged for a tow truck. My wife was kind enough to come out to pick me up (we each have hour-long commutes but she's on the other side so it was nontrivial, making her driving time four hours that day cumulatively). That evening I contacted my insurance company.
I will be getting a rental car this morning; I would have preferred yesterday but in the past few years I've had this experience of not being able to rent a car immediately so I wasn't surprised. I will have the rental car for a while and will now begin shopping for a new commuter car (used, good mileage, well-maintained).
I am self-obsessed in the best of times (hey, I blog so no surprise there) so I have been trying to assess my reaction to the accident. A half a second faster reaction time and I would have cleared the car when swerving and not had an accident. A half a second slower and I would have hit the stopped car directly. I am fairly confident that the shoulder belt and airbag would have kept me alive but would undoubtedly have injured me in the process. So it was a close thing.
I had started my commute home on the interstate four miles earlier. I was still probably at my most attentive because of having merged into traffic only minutes before. Would I have done worse swerving twenty minutes later, listening to a podcast? I don't know.
Had someone been in the stopped car exiting the driver side (unlikely but possible) I would have killed or maimed them sliding along the car. I will always be grateful that no one was physically injured.
I am achy but I was moving furniture the two days before the accident so it's hard to separate out the pain.
My mind has been distracted but I am often that way when I do not have access to a car and lack an agency that I take for granted. I will have to reevaluate after I have the rental car and eventually a new commuter car.
Meanwhile classes start again next week. My preparation is done so I can pick and choose what I work on.
Your account of the events gave me chills. I’m so relieved that you were able to walk away from the accident, and thankfully no one was hurt.
ReplyDeleteThat was the main thing, that no one was injured by the crash. Everything else is a distant second.
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