If getting back behind the wheel after an accident feels terrifying — even for short trips, even months later — you are not being irrational. Your nervous system is doing exactly what it was designed to do.
Your Nervous System Learned Something
When you are in a car accident, your brain processes it as a life threat. Your amygdala — the brain's threat-detection centre — recorded the experience as dangerous. Now anything associated with that experience can trigger the same alarm: getting in a car, a similar intersection, a sudden noise in traffic.
Common Signs of Post-Accident Driving Anxiety
- Heart racing or chest tightening when you get in a car
- Constant scanning for danger while driving — hypervigilance
- Panic attacks while driving or thinking about driving
- Avoiding certain roads, intersections, or times of day
- Needing someone with you to feel safe in the car
- Intrusive images of the accident while driving
Why It Gets Worse Without Help
Avoidance provides short-term relief — but it teaches your nervous system that driving is indeed dangerous. The more you avoid it, the stronger the fear becomes.
What Actually Helps
Effective treatment addresses both the trauma and the nervous system response — trauma-focused counselling to reduce the emotional charge of accident memories, nervous system regulation tools, and structured steps back toward driving confidence. If your accident happened in BC, ICBC counselling may cover this at no cost.
You Do Not Have to Avoid Driving Forever
Book a free consultation to talk about what you are experiencing.
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