I had just returned home to Sivakasi after one of the best weeks I'd had in a while, a client hangout in Chennai, catching up with friends and family, good food, good energy. The kind of week that leaves you feeling full.
Back home, I did what I do any other normal morning. It was Saturday, the 31st of January 2026, I hopped on my bike and headed to work.
A dog ran across the road. I swerved to dodge it. At that same moment, a commercial vehicle ahead turned sharply to the right. I hit the brakes hard, but there wasn't enough road, or enough time. My bike skidded, I collided with the vehicle, and the next thing I knew, I was being dragged across the asphalt for a few meters.
Tibia fracture. Scratches across my body. Four days in the hospital. Ninety days of bed rest ordered by the doctor. For the first three weeks, I couldn't even sit up.
That's how emergencies hit. Not with a warning. Not at a convenient time. And almost never in a way you could have predicted.
The Cost No One Budgets For
The surgery and hospitalization alone ran into six figures. Add the ambulance, the medicines, the miscellaneous expenses, and the number climbed further.
I was fortunate in two ways that most people don't talk about openly.
The first was my father. He stepped in immediately, handled everything, and covered every expense without hesitation. Not everyone has that safety net, and that's something worth sitting with for a moment.
The second was my health insurance. Because we were in a Tier 3/4 city, the hospital didn't have seamless cashless claim support, so we went the reimbursement route. We recovered close to 92% of the total amount spent. We could have recovered the remaining 8% too, had we not misplaced a few pharmacy bills in the chaos.
92% back. That's not a small thing. That's the difference between a crisis and a setback.
The Emergency Fund Myth We Need to Rethink
In my financial planning sessions, I hear this often: "I just need six months of expenses saved as my emergency fund, right?"
Here's my honest answer after going through this: my six months of expenses wouldn't have been enough.
Not for this. Not for a hospitalization of this scale, with this kind of recovery period, lost income, and ongoing medical costs.
The "six months rule" is a starting point, not a ceiling. Your emergency isn't going to read the rule-book before arriving. It's going to show up as a road accident on a Tuesday morning, a sudden diagnosis, or a family member in the ICU. And it's going to cost what it costs, not what you budgeted for it.
Don't assume what your emergencies will look like. Plan for the worst reasonable scenario, not the average one.
What This Taught Me About Financial Preparedness
There's a sobering statistic that stuck with me long before my accident, and hits differently now. Research consistently shows that most Indian families are just one hospitalization away from financial instability.
One. That's it.
So here's what I want you to take away from my experience:
Review your insurance — really review it. Not just whether you have it, but whether it still makes sense. Does your sum insured reflect current medical costs? Are there sub-limits that could limit your payout? If your policy no longer serves you well, port to one that does. Nobody lying outside an ICU ever wished they had less coverage.
Have enough coverage. Under-insurance is one of the most common financial mistakes I see. A ₹3L health cover might feel like protection, but against a major surgery or a long hospitalization, it's barely a cushion.
Make sure your family knows. This is the one people overlook the most. Your nominee and family should know what insurance you have, who your insurer is, how to make a claim, and how to access your accounts if you're incapacitated. If the person who took out the policy is unconscious in a hospital, the family shouldn't be scrambling to find out if there's even a policy to claim.
Be Aware. Be Ready.
I'm not writing this to scare anyone. Fear doesn't build financial resilience, awareness does.
I got lucky. My father was there. My insurance came through. The timing, as bad as it was, could have been worse.
But luck isn't a financial plan.
The sun is shining right now for most of us — stable income, good health, no crisis at the door. That's exactly when you build the foundation. Review your insurance. Grow your emergency fund beyond the minimum. Have the conversation with your family.
Because emergencies don't knock. They collide with you on a Saturday morning on the way to work.
At TMOTRAC, we're always happy to guide. If you'd like help reviewing your insurance or emergency fund strategy, feel free to reach out.