The Shoulder
The Shoulder
74
Car accidentscalm-beaver-611

Just caused my first accident ever and I can't stop shaking — someone please talk me down

I've been sitting on my bathroom floor for the past two hours just completely falling apart and I needed somewhere to put this.

I've been driving for about six weeks. Six weeks. Today I was leaving a parking garage downtown and misjudged the clearance on a support pillar while pulling out of a tight spot. Scraped the entire passenger side of my roommate's car — the one she was kind enough to let me borrow while my bike is getting repaired. Nobody was hurt, no other cars involved, just me and a concrete pillar and an absolutely destroyed panel of sheet metal.

I held it together while I called my roommate, while I took photos, while I arranged a tow. I even managed to sound calm when I called her mom (who is listed on the insurance). The second I got home I just completely lost it.

The thing is — I was being careful. I was going maybe 2 mph. The angles in that garage were genuinely brutal. But it doesn't matter, because the outcome is the same either way and I feel like the worst person alive right now.

I know logically that accidents happen. I know six weeks in is still basically a baby driver. I know my roommate was surprisingly kind about it on the phone. But the guilt is just sitting on my chest like a boulder.

Has anyone else caused damage to someone else's car early on and come out the other side? What happens next with the insurance claim? Do I need to do anything beyond what's already been reported? I just need to hear some voices right now.

11replies

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11 replies

  • 15
    kind-owl-780

    Oh my gosh I felt this in my soul. I rear-ended someone in stop-and-go traffic my second month of driving — full liability, my fault, other person's car got a pretty good hit. I cried for like three days straight. I promise you the acute horror of it does fade. You're in the thick of it right now but it won't feel this raw forever. The fact that nobody got hurt is genuinely the most important thing.

  • 14
    patient-wolf-301

    Please get off the bathroom floor and drink some water first, okay? I'm serious. You handled the hard practical stuff already — photos, tow, calls. That's actually a lot. Be a little gentle with yourself tonight.

  • 8
    mellow-bison-853

    From a process standpoint you've already done the right things. Keep all your photos organized in one folder, save any texts or voicemails related to the incident, and write down a timeline of exactly what happened while it's fresh — time, location, what you were doing, what you observed. Even in a straightforward single-vehicle situation that documentation is useful if any questions come up later with the insurer. Most importantly: let the insurance company do its job from here. That's what the coverage is for.

  • 11
    curious-seal-739

    One thing worth knowing — even when you're clearly at fault and it's a clean single-vehicle claim, adjusters will sometimes use your emotional state against you. If they call and you're still in full cry mode, it's okay to say 'I've already filed the report, I'll follow up in writing.' You don't have to give a recorded statement while you're falling apart.

    • 3
      mellow-late-shift350

      Exactly my experience. Persistence paid off in the end.

  • 8
    brave-badger-655

    I used to work claims and honestly? Parking garage scrapes are like the most routine thing we'd see. It's not dramatic from the insurance side at all. File the claim if it hasn't been done already, let them assign an appraiser, and it moves through the system. The emotional weight you're carrying is real but I promise on the insurance processing side this is a very ordinary day for them. That might actually be comforting — you're not a disaster case, you're just Tuesday.

  • 6
    genuine-swan-994

    The shaking and the hours of crying — that's your nervous system doing exactly what it's supposed to do after a scary stressful event. Your body perceived danger and it's processing. Drink water, eat something small even if you don't want to, and try to get horizontal even if you can't sleep. Don't make any big decisions or send any important messages tonight.

  • 16
    bold-beaver-955

    No injuries. No other person's car. Just a pillar, some sheet metal, and a really bad afternoon. In the grand universe of first accidents, you honestly landed in a relatively okay spot. Your roommate being kind about it is huge — that relationship is intact. Everything else is just logistics.

    • 0
      steady-wanderer312

      Curious whether you did this on your own or had help with it.

  • 12
    hearty-marmot-910

    Here's what actually matters right now: 1) everyone is physically fine, 2) there's insurance, 3) the claim process has started. Everything you're feeling is valid but it doesn't change any of those three facts. The guilt isn't useful data at this point — it's just noise. Give yourself tonight to feel it and then tomorrow you put one foot in front of the other.

    • 20
      cool-hare-207

      Did your roommate's insurance get formally notified yet or just her mom verbally? There's a difference between a family conversation and an actual claim being opened. I'd confirm the claim number exists before you fully exhale. Not to stress you out more — just making sure the practical piece is locked in.