After a long day under the hood, the last thing a mechanic wants is to lift the hood on their own car. But when the check engine light stares back at you in your own driveway, who do you call? For one TikTok creator, the answer was: anybody but me.
In a viral clip with over 300,000 views, Netherlands-based car enthusiast roadgoatgarage (@roadgoatgarage) zooms his camera in on a Mercedes-Benz SUV with an unidentified problem, lamenting that there’s not really an excuse for calling a mechanic to fix your car if you work all day fixing other people’s cars. An overlay of an infamous overreaction gif clip spells out the level of frustration.
The video creates a sharp contrast between the visible frustration of a mechanic staring at his own broken car, turning what might be an ordinary repair into a moment that many car enthusiasts instantly recognize. What makes the clip compelling isn’t just the car issue; it’s the awareness that matches many real experiences.
For anyone with wrenching skills, there’s a threshold where familiarity becomes fatigue: when the diagnosis, the tools, the hours, everything that usually fuels satisfaction instead becomes a weight. The meme element captures that; viewers don’t need to know what the precise problem is. They feel the mechanic’s dread.
Experts at Avoiding Their Own Work
It’s an irony that’s surfaced repeatedly in the video comments. People who can diagnose, fix, and maintain everyone else’s vehicles often balk at doing the same for their own. One commenter put it simply: “I can fix every single car except mine.” Another said, “If it ain’t a blown fuse, I’m done.” These are not unusual sentiments in mechanic forums or among hobbyists.
Mechanics face several practical obstacles when it comes to their own vehicles. They may lack the spare time after long shop hours. They may not have access to specialized tools at home.
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On the other hand, they may dread the cost, both in parts and in labor, especially given how labor rates and parts prices have been rising sharply in recent years.
According to CarPro, average repair costs in the U.S. have increased by about 26% in the past two years, even while repair times have modestly improved. The cost of parts has also been unstable, with many shops reporting inflation and supply chain disruptions that have driven both expenses and wait times upward.
Electrical issues are a recurring theme in the TikTok comments and among auto professionals. One user writes, “I’m all good until electrical work is involved. Then I tap out.” It’s no surprise, as modern vehicles increasingly depend on complex electrical systems, sensors, control modules, ADAS features, and software. Diagnosing a bad wire or sensor isn’t always straightforward, and misdiagnosis can lead to cascading failures.
Mechanic shops today highlight how even a seemingly simple electrical problem, such as erratic lights or dashboard warnings, can require advanced diagnostic tools like OBD-II scanners, voltmeters, and sometimes proprietary software. Warning lights might hide deeper module failures; loose connections or short circuits may be intermittent. Jones Complete Car Care outlines that common electrical problems range from dead batteries and alternators to faulty sensors, ignition system shorts, and control module failures. Small mistakes in electrical repairs can escalate, both in cost and in risk.
Rising Costs and Racing Clocks
Beyond the technical difficulties, there’s the emotional and financial pressure. Auto repair costs are rising across the board: consumer repair and parts bills are up; labor costs are higher; wait times in many shops are stretched due to technician shortages and parts delivery slowdowns. A Midwest automotive association recently reported steep rises in the cost of owning and maintaining a vehicle, with repair bills pushing many owners to delay maintenance.
For the mechanic, this means what might have once been “just a weekend project” becomes something more: a decision weighed by time off, cost of parts, and risk of making things worse. The mental load of knowing what could go wrong, even when you have the skills, adds friction. And the wrench-turner’s pride sometimes turns into a burden. Admitting you need help or parts is admitting your own tools or patchwork won’t cut it.
The TikTok is funny because it resonates with many of us who understand that sinking feeling: when the diagnosis board lights up on the dashboard, or the wiring harness looks more complicated than the job promised, or the part you need is back-ordered. For mechanics, this overlap of ability and dread makes a powerful contrast.
As cars become more complex, costs rise, and part lead times stretch, the divide between the professional world and personal ownership narrows. Working on your own car requires tools, time, patience, money, and emotional capital. For many, it’s easier to outsource than to face the project head-on.
The meme signal in roadgoatgarage’s video combines panic, distress, that “I need an adult” moment, and is a kind of shorthand for a broader truth: sometimes being the expert doesn’t make you immune to reluctance when it’s your own car.
Motor1 reached out to the creator via direct message. We’ll update this if he responds.
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