I think what I did was fine. You decide

What happens when generosity in a long-term relationship starts feeling one-sided? Many couples face moments where one partner’s actions force the other to rethink boundaries, money, and trust.

In this situation, a man who has shared his vehicles for years suddenly finds himself dealing with repeated accidents, zero accountability, and explosive anger when he finally prioritizes his own needs. The disagreement escalated quickly into a full breakup-level fight, leaving both sides hurt and the future of their six-year relationship uncertain.

‘I think what I did was fine. You decide’

The story starts with a couple who have been together since high school.

I think what I did was fine. You decide Ok so this started a major fight between me(24M) and my girlfriend(24F). So my gf and I have lived together for...

At 20 I was lucky to be making quite a bit of money and so I bought myself a new Jeep Wrangler as a second car to have fun with....

My gfs car was totaled right after we moved in together and so I let her use whichever of my cars I wasnt and put her on my insurance.

She never ended up buying another car because she can't save money and has gotten comfortable in my "new fancy" cars compared to her 04 camry.

Things took a sharp turn when two serious accidents happened in quick succession.

Now we get to the problem. She crashed both of them in a month. My jeep just needed $4500 of body work but my Subaru was a total loss. (She...

The jeep she pulled out of a parking space too tight and scraped every panel from front to back and destroyed the other car. The Subaru she was texting and...

Now I get that accidents happen but she took no responsibility for either accident! The jeep is somewhat understandable but to be texting and driving(something she knows I feel very...

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So I told her its fine but that I would be taking the insurance money for the Subaru and sell my jeep after it was fixed and buying myself a...

The final decision led to an intense confrontation.

She said okay and nothing else really. The next Saturday when the Jeep was fixed I did exactly what I said I was going to and bought myself a tricked...

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My gf was working and came home and went ballistic saying she couldn't believe I didn't get her a car too and wasted it buying such a nice car for...

I told her with a 5k downpayment you can pretty much buy exactly what we had before maybe a bit newer but she was mad because she will have monthly...

Thar bit about presents for her family really made me feel like an ass. I did offer to help with that and explained I just wanted her to have an...

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"If we ever broke up you would need your own car" and that set her off again about if i see my life with her or not. She is staying...

This conflict centers on repeated vehicle accidents caused by one partner, complete lack of accountability, and a major disagreement over how to handle the resulting insurance money. The man feels betrayed by the absence of responsibility, while the woman feels abandoned when he chose a new car for himself. At its core, the fight highlights mismatched expectations about financial independence, shared resources, and future security in a long-term relationship.

The girlfriend appears driven by fear of losing comfort and status, combined with avoidance of adult financial responsibility. She has grown accustomed to using his vehicles without personal consequences, which makes any change feel like punishment. The man, on the other hand, seems motivated by frustration over repeated losses and a desire to protect himself financially. Communication broke down when he framed the $5,000 offer in terms of a potential breakup, which triggered deep insecurity about commitment.

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As relationship therapist Esther Perel has observed, “The quality of our relationships depends on our capacity to take responsibility for our own desires and actions.” In this case, the refusal to own the accidents and the immediate shift to blame created a cycle where empathy vanished on both sides, turning a practical issue into an emotional standoff.

The healthiest path forward involves clear, calm boundaries. He should remove her from his insurance immediately and stop providing vehicles. She needs to secure her own policy and car, even if modest. Both would benefit from a private conversation using “I feel” statements to express hurt without accusation, followed by a few weeks of space to reflect. Small consistent steps toward individual financial accountability can rebuild respect—if both are willing.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

The social media community reacted strongly to this post, with opinions splitting sharply between strong support for the original poster and calls to reevaluate or end the relationship entirely.

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Many readers strongly backed the man’s decision. They viewed his actions as fair and generous given the circumstances:

valhalla-at-your-grl − So she wrecked not one but TWO cars that were not hers and feels zero remorse for it and she expects you to not only help her get...

but straight up pay for one so that she can go about spending her money on whatever frivolous materialistic things she wants?

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Your offer to give her money for a downpayment on a new car is more than what she deserves in this situation. She's an "adult" who should be capable of...

Also, her trying to guilt trip you by saying she won't have money for Christmas gifts is a p__s poor excuse for not wanting to pay for something. NTA. The...

BallantyneR − Hmmm, let's see. Your girlfriend had a car, it got totalled (was she at fault? ). She had free use of a further 2 vehicles - didn't even...

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She's bad with money, spends so much on skincare and personal luxuries that she can't afford to run her own vehicle and is throwing a fit because you are only...

Your 20's are an excellent time to figure things out. It's when you meet people, fall in love, fall out of love and learn who you are. Are you a...

Do you think that the person you are with now is the person you want to wake up next to in 25 years? Your girlfriend cannot afford her life without...

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sitnquiet − Holy friggin frig, Batman - how many red flags does she have to wave at you before you notice them?

Leeches off your cars, fiscally irresponsible, refuses to take responsibility for trashing YOUR cars, pissed that you spent the money she cost you on yourself, unappreciative of your help for...

and now is emotionally blackmailing you because you won't give her more and more and more - and somehow you think you might be in the wrong somehow? Seriously?

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Damn, brother, where's your spine? Does she call every shot in your home life too? Is she super high on the crazy/hot scale? NTA - and let's say it again...

Though you may be suffering from sunk cost fallacy by sticking with her just because you were high school sweethearts and have been together so long.

Dude, you can do better with someone who respects and cares about you - not just what you can give her. Tell her she can do without the $5000 too...

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A large number of commenters urged him to protect himself and seriously reconsider the relationship:

themixedwonder − DO NOT give her that 5k.

snazzy_soul − NTA, but you will be an AH if you continue this relationship without making some changes (including considering breaking up with her).

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Someone who trashes BOTH of your cars, texts while driving, takes no responsibility for the accidents, expects you to buy her a new car, raises your insurance rates,

and is angry that you spent your money on the car you wanted, is a selfish, immature and irresponsible individual. What do you think is going to happen if you...

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Original_Activity_94 − wait wait wait. She hit a parked car while texting and then trashed your jeep backing out of a parking spot. And you’re going to still give her...

You have been beyond generous with loaning her a car. She has been really ungenerous with her care and ungrateful for what she had. I would have the biggest issue...

Texting and driving is dangerous and unnecessary. But for her to then demand more money from you ? !? That is nuts! ! Take stock of how she’s acting and...

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Does this happen in other areas? Take a beat and hold off on giving her money until she actually seems grateful, or acts like she even likes you.

LewDogg − Hold the on, did she not even offer to cover any of the damages? ! If I damaged someone else's car I would insist on paying for the...

She just let you pay to fix your jeep and is upset you're gifting her $5K to get herself a car? ! How is someone this dense and selfish? I...

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Others added practical warnings or questioned the dynamic in a more neutral or critical tone:

everellie − I looked for this comment and didn't see it, so here you go: She needs to be off of your insurance, too. She can pay for her OWN...

They can drop you like a hot potato if you have too many accidents. There's a whole extortionist subprime market for insurance that will be all you have left to...

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Worried-Confusion456 − This all makes me uncomfortable. You shouldn't let her drive your cars, and you need to let her deal with the next accident she is in. She is...

I am a woman. And I really wanted to take care of myself before I moved in with a bf. I did, and it was really good for me. I...

It is very generous of you to offer to help with xmas gifts. And I can see why she is upset about the what if you two break up comment....

So I don't think you are wrong because you were looking out for her. But the delivery would always be taken the wrong way.

txlady100 − Is this fake? Please be fake. Dude. Please. You’re being a sucker. Let her be a grown up. You’re enabling her immaturity. Yta if you continue as you...

This situation shows how quickly unaddressed habits—like poor financial responsibility and lack of accountability—can erode trust built over many years. Generosity feels good until it becomes expected, and one partner’s refusal to own mistakes forces the other to draw hard lines. The story highlights the importance of both people bringing independence and mutual respect into a shared life.

When does support turn into enabling? Would you have given the $5,000 anyway, or would you have stepped back completely after the accidents? How would you handle the balance between protecting your own future and supporting a long-term partner?

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