The Shoulder
The Shoulder
61
Property damageclear-swan-719

Totaled my boyfriend's car while he's abroad and I can't stop spiraling

I don't even know how to start this. My boyfriend has been working overseas for about three months now — one of those long-rotation jobs where real communication is limited and inconsistent. Before he left, he asked me to drive his car occasionally so the battery wouldn't die and it stayed in good shape. It meant a lot to him.

Last week I was coming home from a late shift and got clipped by someone running a stop sign. The impact spun me into a parked truck. His car is almost certainly a total loss. I walked away with some bruising and a really sore neck, but physically I'm okay.

Here's where I'm really struggling: I haven't been able to reach him to tell him yet. His family knows and they've been kind, but every hour that goes by I feel this weight getting heavier. I keep replaying it — could I have reacted faster, taken a different route, anything. Rationally I know someone blew a stop sign. Emotionally I feel like I destroyed something he trusted me with.

The financial stuff is piling on too. My income is tight. I'm already looking at how insurance works when the car was his and I was a permissive driver, and I honestly don't fully understand what's covered and what I'm on the hook for.

But honestly the hardest part to admit: I've been struggling with my mental health for a while, and this accident has pushed me into a really dark place. Like, a really dark place. I haven't hurt myself but the thoughts are loud right now.

If anyone has been through something similar — the guilt, the waiting, any of it — I just need to know I'm not alone right now.

10replies

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10 replies

  • 21
    daring-bison-337

    So when a named insured's car is driven by someone with permission, the owner's policy is typically primary — meaning his insurance would respond first before yours. That said, every policy has different language and some have exclusions around household members or regular use. Pull the declarations page if you can get access to it and look at the 'permissive use' section. I'm not saying you're covered, just that the picture might be better than you think right now.

    • 8
      weary-survivor207

      This is really helpful — thank you for posting it.

  • 19
    genuine-wolf-208

    Okay here's what I'd do right now in order: 1) Text or call 988 just to have it in your phone, because you said your thoughts are dark and that's not something to push aside. 2) See a doctor about your neck — today if possible. 3) Pull whatever insurance documents you can find and don't talk to any adjuster until you know what you're looking at. The car stuff is solvable. Focus on you first.

  • 19
    kind-badger-177

    You said someone ran a stop sign — was there a police report filed? Any witnesses or cameras at that intersection? Because 'someone else caused this' is very different from 'I was at fault,' and that distinction matters a lot for how your insurance exposure shakes out. Don't assume fault before you actually have the facts.

  • 18
    spry-swan-587

    You walked away. I know that probably sounds hollow when you're drowning in guilt and stress, but it really does matter. Cars get replaced or paid out. Injuries heal. And a partner who genuinely loves you is going to care a lot more that you're safe than that the car is gone. Give him the chance to show you that before you assume the worst.

  • 15
    patient-swift-498

    I totaled my sister's car two years ago and the guilt was absolutely crushing — it genuinely felt like more than just the car, like I had broken her trust in me as a person. I want you to know that feeling does ease. It takes time and some really honest conversations, but it eases. Please don't carry this alone.

    • 14
      silent-sparrow-775

      I just want to stop and say — please reach out to the 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline (call or text 988) if those dark thoughts get louder. I know this post is about the accident but you mentioned where your head is at and that matters so much more than the car. The car stuff can be figured out. You can't be replaced. Please talk to someone tonight if you need to.

    • 12
      quiet-bison-722

      The neck soreness you mentioned — please don't brush that off. Whiplash symptoms can feel minor for the first 48-72 hours and then really flare up. Get checked out even if you feel mostly okay right now. Document everything with a doctor.

      And separately — I work with a lot of people who go through traumatic events, and what you're describing emotionally sounds like acute stress on top of an already hard season. That's real. Please be as serious about your mental health right now as you are about the insurance stuff.

    • 5
      keen-raven-285

      Permissive driver situations are trickier than they sound and adjusters know how to use that ambiguity. Don't give a recorded statement to anyone until you understand exactly what coverage applies — his policy, your policy, and whether there's any gap between them. They will ask you leading questions and your answers can affect the outcome.

    • 10
      hearty-beaver-234

      A few things that might help you think through this: First, if the other driver ran a stop sign, there may be a legitimate liability argument that this wasn't fully your fault — that matters for how claims get handled. Second, if your neck keeps bothering you, get medical records going now because any injury claim needs documentation from close to the date of the accident. Third, you don't have to navigate all of this alone — a free consult with a PI attorney costs you nothing and can help you understand what you're actually dealing with.