Some boxer-primed cases can be a bear with a heavily-crimped primer, but an errant spent primer dropping into a case can also bend/break your decap pin as well.
Sorting brass is essential before sizing/decapping any brass. You learned your lesson.
Berdan-primed brass can be reloaded, but it is a bit more involved. Personally, I do it with 7.62x39/51/54R, 6.5x55, 7.5x55, 8mm and .303 British, to name a few. With readily-available .308 Win. boxer-primed brass, why bother, unless you just want to prove you can do it.
Although not nearly as common, you may come across .38 Special and other common calibers with berdan primers. The anvil dimple can look like a boxer-primed flash hole...look carefully! Berdan cases may have one, two or three flash holes. I haven't seen more than three yet!