Escobar929
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2022
- Threads
- 1
- Messages
- 139
- Reaction score
- 81
- Location
- Hollywood, FL
- Car(s)
- 2020 BMW M2cs, 2023 Acura Integra
100% agree, the best thing is to get back out there and try to put it behind you. When I was 12, my sister picked me up from school and we got hit when she made a left turn and didn't see a guy coming. Nearly 30 years later, I still get tingle in my spine when making left turns. Even though I've never even come close to being hit myself.Honestly best thing for him to do is go back out and drive. Every accident I've had has been in rain/snow and other people hitting me. It's resulted in 2 totaled cars and makes me TERRIFIED to drive in heavy rains. And this is over 25 years of driving. The only way I'm KIND of getting over it is forcing myself to go out driving when it's raining out so that I force myself to get used to it. Accidents can cause PTSD but it's one you just must confront.
It almost sounds like he's sitting too close to the wheel potentially with no seatbelt if he hit his head, it doesn't look like it was a hard hit. I'd suggest you look up good driving positions and see how it shows vs how your son sits in the car. He may also want to follow other cars farther if he hit the car in front of him. As some INS companies will deem that HIS fault depending on the impact speed of the car that hit him.
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