Home » How A Minor Fender Bender In My Dream Car Helped Me Change My Life

How A Minor Fender Bender In My Dream Car Helped Me Change My Life

Zoe Crash Top

The difference between a car enthusiast and a normie is that we car-nuts love our cars. We chose them, we cherish them, and we form emotional bonds that burrow into the core of our very identity. When our cars are wounded, we are wounded. We miss them when they’re gone.

There is a car in my life that I love. A 2001 Audi TT with a turbo under the hood and a forced induction song in its heart. Fate saw my car wrested from me for two long months in the dumbest circumstances. A rollercoaster of nonsense and upheaval would pass before I got it back. This is that story.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

The tale began on a warm January morning. The summer sun was rising in the sky, with clear visibility out to 10 miles if you happened to be flying overhead. I found myself making the trek down to the big city for a painful blood draw, so I was already in a petulant mood despite the conditions. As I rolled to a stop in the bumper-to-bumper traffic, inching my way towards my undesirable destination, it happened. BANG.

Audi Tt 12 Wipelicense
It was a long road to get here. Credit: Yennefer Briffa

With a deafening crunch, I was flung forward in my seat. So loud, so jarring, that my brain took seconds to register what was even going on. Oh. A crash. This was a crash. Someone ran into the back of my car, hard. With time somewhat dilated, I flung the door open and stepped out into the street, fully expecting the rear end of the car to be utterly demolished, fragments scattered across the asphalt. Based on the sound alone, the Audi had to be totaled, for certain.

My Dream Car Was Wounded

As time resumed a more regulated flow, I found the reality was, thankfully, less horrifying. I stood out on to the still-active road to see a red Ford Focus with the bumper mashed up. The other driver exited her car and covered her face as she saw the damage. “What the fuck?” was the only real speech I could muster. I was, as you can imagine, pretty perturbed at having my already-terrible morning plans disrupted by further pain and suffering.

Audicrash (8)
That won’t buff out.

Ultimately, the Audi got the better of the Ford in this collision. The hapless hatchback had a badly buckled hood and disfigured bumper, much the worse for wear. The Audi, on the other hand, didn’t look so bad. An initial glance showed the rear end to be mostly intact, despite my initial fears. There was damage to the trunk trim, and a taillight was now cracked. Closer inspection revealed the bumper had been cracked in three places, however, and there was now a nice reverse imprint of the Ford’s license plate stamped into the plastic.

Upon assessing the damage, I realized this wasn’t some huge crash, despite how loud it sounded in the cabin. I got on with exchanging details with the other driver, who amusingly advised me she was leaving the country in a mere few hours. “I’m sure this won’t complicate things,” I thought to myself. I then made it to my blood draw, just barely on time, and strangely found the procedure less painful than expected, perhaps thanks to the distraction of having to figure out what to do with my lightly battered roadster.

Audicrash (3)
It’s nice when the offending vehicle stamps damning evidence right into your rear bumper. 

Had this been a daily beater, I might have made the decision to just do some junkyard repairs myself. That idea flew out the window after half an hour of trying to figure out where to source replacement taillights for a 25-year-old sports car. Never mind the quite difficult job of replacing and color-matching a bumper and dealing with all the other minor things that were now wrong with the rear end.

Audicrash (5)
It doesn’t seem like a big deal, but you’d be surprised at how hard it is to find a matching replacement set.

The decision was made. The Audi would have to go to a crash repairer. Only, there was a problem. I had third-party insurance, which only really covers the damage I do to other people’s stuff by driving into it. It doesn’t help me a lot if other people drive into me. In this case, the other driver was 100% at fault because they rear-ended my car. If I had comprehensive insurance, I could call up the company, and they would deal with recovering costs from the other driver and handling the whole thing. Without that, it would traditionally be up to me to chase down the other driver to cover my repairs or make a claim on their own insurance. This was going to be a huge pain, complicated by the fact that the other driver was becoming difficult to contact now that she was out of the country.

Eventually, I found a crash repairer that specializes in no-fault cases like these. They fix your car, and wrangle the other driver and their insurance company to make sure they actually pay for everything. They looked over my case, took my keys, and told me they’d get it sorted. I felt like everything was going to be fine, and given the limited damage, I’d have my car back in a few short weeks. In the meantime, I had a big old family SUV as a hire car, in place of my lithe little roadster. At the very least, the chunky Honda CR-V would be easier to maneuver over speed bumps.

The Rental That Helped Me Change My Life

Honda Car
This Honda was not very me.

Things started going sideways from the drop. The crash repairer couldn’t get hold of the other driver, who was now halfway around the world on holiday. Eventually, I managed to reach out on WhatsApp and get enough insurance information to get the ball rolling. More days rolled by, at which point I found out the other driver’s partner had failed to enter any of my details into the insurance claim. I then had to ring somebody else’s insurance company and walk them through the basic details of the accident. Then I had to listen to them try to tell me that they might not cover the cost of a hire car. Which, given my car was going to be laid up for weeks, felt mean-spirited. I was pretty sure it was just threatening hot air on their part, but I really didn’t want to get stuck with a bill at the end of all this, given that their customer wrecked my car. 

It ended up taking over a week just for the insurer to approve repairs. Once that hurdle was overcome, I figured it would be smooth sailing, and I’d have my car back in short order. Only… four weeks went by. Then five, then six. Radio silence. It felt like a long time to do a bumper and a taillight, so I rang up. “Oh, yes. They’ve ordered the parts. They’re going to start working on your car soon. It should be ready by next week.” Okay, then…

Only, more time went by… and I heard nothing. I knew I should be following up, knew I should be chasing my car and what was going on… but life was growing rapidly more complicated, and I didn’t have the capacity to care. Nothing happens in a vacuum, after all. While my car was AWOL, I travelled thousands of kilometers to marry off two of my best friends at two separate weddings spread far across the country. I had an entire friendship flourish out of nothing, only to see it go down in flames. And I finally started dealing with a personal matter that had been pending for some time.

20260408 112152
It sure was roomy, though. And comfortable. And… convenient… oh gosh.

In the meantime, the Honda CR-V was making me question my very identity as a car enthusiast. It was everything the Audi was not. It was a large, roomy vehicle that fit everything I could possibly ever need to haul around. It was comfortable. And perhaps best of all, it didn’t scrape going up the driveway. I suddenly had an easy car that I preferred even over my partner’s practical hatchback. Did I want the safe, white, boring, kid hauler? Were turbos and rubber-band tires and coilovers too much to bear anymore? Was this car changing me in ways I didn’t understand? I started to wonder if this crash was a curse.

Only, the Honda would soon come in handy. It was around this time that I decided to finally come out as transgender. Now, normally this would involve making some awkward explanations to friends and more formal representations to one’s wider community. I kind of wanted to do it with more panache, though. I decided I would buy a fine piece of Swedish furniture to celebrate the gigantic life milestone, and execute a photo shoot with it to announce my brand new shiny gender (and my new chair). In turn, the hire car would play its role, allowing me to move this heavy piece of furniture to the location I’d hired for the shoot. I’d literally never have been able to pull this off in my Audi TT. I have the woman who hit my car to thank for making this shoot possible at all.

20260330 071624
This never would have fit in the Audi.
Allikealightingsetup
Marvel at my all-Ikea lighting setup. Don’t be like me… get softboxes.
Dsc07210 Crop Color
It was a nice day. Credit: Aislinn Whittenbury

March came to a close, and the Honda, my new gender, and I were all getting along swimmingly. But I was starting to wonder… would I ever get my car back? By now, it had been nine weeks, so surely the car had to be almost ready. I was about to make an irate call when they rang me… the Audi was finally ready to pick up.

I made arrangements, went and washed and vacuumed the hire car, and dragged myself across town to pick the car up. I cosplayed as a boy because I really didn’t feel like explaining genders and the social maelstrom of the last few months to people that, fundamentally, were just here to fix my car.

I just spent two hours cleaning my hire car and driving across town to pick my car up.

Only to get to the crash repairer and find that the driver’s door lock has failed and I can’t get into the car.

Leaving in the Honda I guess…

[image or embed]

— Zoe Skyforest (@rainbowdefault.bsky.social) April 8, 2026 at 12:18 PM


Only, there was a new problem. The car wouldn’t open, they told me. Okay, I figured. They didn’t realize the keyless entry was non-functional and that you had to use the metal key instead. Only… nope. Putting the key in the barrel and turning did precisely… nothing. On either the passenger or the driver’s side. The doors wouldn’t open. The car was locked shut. “How have you been working on it all this time?” I asked, utterly bewildered. They didn’t have an answer for me, and I had no answers for them. “Leave it with us,” the guy told me. I was returned the keys to my now very-familiar Honda, and went home, defeated.

It would be another week before I heard back. They hired two separate automotive locksmiths to get into the vehicle, and they wisely elected to leave the car unlocked after one finally managed to get in. It seemed the car battery had died during the extended stay at the crash repairer, and they told me it was “very dead.” This meant that even when the key was in the barrel and activating the unlock microswitch, there was no battery power to actually fire the power lock actuators. Now, unless the Audi TT is particularly weird, turning the key in the barrel should still have unlatched the locks mechanically. However, these cars often have worn barrels that snag keys and don’t quite function properly. I think this was the problem in my case, as I’d been having some minor issues with the locks for some time. As long as the battery was dead, the doors wouldn’t unlock.

A New Beginning

However, once they broke in and got the battery charged back up, the car was once again usable, and the keys were placed in my hands. Finally, after two long months, the Audi was mine.

Audi Tt 1 Wipelicense
Credit: Yennefer Briffa
Audi Tt 8
Credit: Yennefer Briffa
Audi Tt 10
Credit: Yennefer Briffa

I was ecstatic to finally have my car back. It’s given me no problems since. The door locks are still dodgy, but I’ve had no actual problems getting into the vehicle. I should probably investigate this and fix it, but honestly, who has the time?

I decided to celebrate the return of my beloved sports car with yet another photo shoot. This time, I hired the talented Yennefer Briffa, a car enthusiast who knows her way around heavy cameras. You know, the good ones that take 30-megabyte photos. We went to my favorite rooftop and shot away the morning, before congratulating ourselves with hot coffee and “sourdough” at a local cafe (they got my order wrong). A fun bonus was getting to ride in Yen’s delicious enthusiast car – a 2009 Toyota Corolla Seca with a factory manual transmission. I’d never seen one in the wild.

Audi Tt 65
Getting your car back is the perfect justification for a shoot. Credit: Yennefer Briffa
Audi Tt 49
Credit: Yennefer Briffa
Audi Tt 20
Credit: Yennefer Briffa
Audi Tt 2 Wipelicense
Credit: Yennefer Briffa

Time To Write The Next Chapter

After all the upheaval and change over the last two months, having my car back felt like a new beginning. I had shed the skin of a past life, and the Honda that helped carry me along that journey. I was a new me, back in my rad car, feeling badass as fuck. The sun was shining, the leaves were trickling off the autumn trees, and all was well.

Sometimes you go on a journey, and that journey is hard. Sometimes you have to make your way down roads unexpected, take paths uncharted, and travel with passengers who will support you and let you down all on the same trip. At the end, though, if you persevere, you’ll get where you’re going. You’ll turn the key in your own car, hear the engine thrum into life, and you’ll know that everything is finally going to be okay.

Audi Tt 41
Credit: Yennefer Briffa

It might have started with a car crash for the Audi, but I was the one who got put back together in the end. I’m glad it turned out that way.

Photos from the author, except where credited.

Share on facebook
Facebook
Share on whatsapp
WhatsApp
Share on twitter
Twitter
Share on linkedin
LinkedIn
Share on reddit
Reddit
Subscribe
Notify of
22 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Albert Ferrer
Member
Albert Ferrer
1 minute ago

I can relate to the big Honda sensation. I recently swapped an A110 for a Clio. The Clio is so easy and comfortable… that I have had the need to start looking for a second car (which will probably be an MX-5)

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
9 minutes ago

Congrats on coming out! Tough thing to do in the world today, but the weight lifted off your chest by doing so is definitely worth it.

TK-421
TK-421
9 minutes ago

“cosplayed as a boy” made me smile. Welcome back!

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
11 minutes ago

Welcome back, Zoe!

So which of the staff writers offered more help, Mercedes with the coming out or Matt with coming to grips with starting to like a CR-V?

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
11 minutes ago

That feeling you have of the usefulness of the CRV reminds me of why I like a hot hatch. Sure, it’s no Audi TT – but I feel like I can have fun every day.

Shooting Brake
Member
Shooting Brake
14 minutes ago

Congratulations on coming out! And glad the car got sorted out ok in the end! Happy Pride Month from the US! Do yall have pride month opposite us down under?

Icouldntfindaclevername
Member
Icouldntfindaclevername
14 minutes ago

Welcome back and congrats on your new life’s journey.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
17 minutes ago

Hey Zoe, glad to read another of your stories!

Had to look up that specific Corolla it’s weird almost looks like a Yaris, but not anything we ever got in the US, would love to hear more about that sometime.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
9 minutes ago
Reply to  Max Headbolts

I’d heard the name before but in the context of the E90 series, Corolla Seca was the Aussie market name for what was the Sprinter Cielo in Japan and the Geo Prizm Hatchback in America.

NC Miata NA
Member
NC Miata NA
21 minutes ago

It is heartwarming stories like this that show no matter where life’s journey takes you, the insurance industry will still be shit when you get there.

Aaronaut
Member
Aaronaut
27 minutes ago

So, you’re buying a boring, sensible crossover then?
Also, welcome back and good luck in this new chapter of your life!

Cerberus
Member
Cerberus
31 minutes ago

Tires with sidewall. They might not look as cool, but I have no issues with the ride in my GR86 with 17s in New England frost and snow plow damaged roads. I never had any issues with speed bumps, either, at stock ride height (and 22mm extra clearance in winter on taller snow tires).

A couple years ago, it was out a little over a month waiting for parts due to crash damage from an idiot, too, but there weren’t many whole front ends in the US. I had an Equinox as a rental. It wasn’t half bad (which also means it wasn’t half good) and it was nice to drive something I didn’t care about again as it had been quite a lot of years, but I was happy to get my car back.

Last edited 30 minutes ago by Cerberus
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Member
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
31 minutes ago

Well, congrats on your journey. May much happiness come your way!

Last edited 19 minutes ago by Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Matt Hardigree
Admin
Matt Hardigree
18 minutes ago

Yes.

Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
Member
Ramblin' Gamblin' Man
13 minutes ago
Reply to  Matt Hardigree

Thanks Matt, I edited my original post ( the one that you responded to) I did not read the ENTIRE post thoroughly the first time and when I did read it a second time the answer was there. 🙂

Ex-Exeo
Ex-Exeo
34 minutes ago

Welcome back! The bumpy road is behind you – time to step on the gas!

Too WRXy
Member
Too WRXy
35 minutes ago

Congratulations Zoe!

MondialMatt
Member
MondialMatt
41 minutes ago

“Hapless hatchback,” nice. Good to have you back.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
44 minutes ago

Did you at least Fuck With Shoes On in the Hire car while you had the space to make use of?

Congrats on the journey and the happy conclusion to this chapter!

TOSSABL
Member
TOSSABL
55 minutes ago

Congratulations ! I had expanded the top shot, so suspected I might know the gist of this.

And, I found my daughter’s CR-V quite easy to adapt to—even mulled that it would be perfect for a bank heist as no one looks twice at them. They’re perfectly anonymous on top of being quite competent transportation.

I have a 2-seater convertible and have to admit that the Honda is much better at car things as long as that doesn’t involve a track—and I suspect it wouldn’t actually suck too badly on-track

Matt Hardigree
Admin
Matt Hardigree
1 hour ago

We’re so grateful to be able to share Zoe’s story, and I look forward to seeing the community welcome her!

Jdoubledub
Member
Jdoubledub
1 hour ago

Welcome back, Zoe! Been wondering where you’ve been.

22
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x