She is a devoted nurse, caught in the relentless whirlwind of her demanding career, struggling to balance her professional obligations with the expectations of her family life. Her husband, deeply rooted in his close-knit family’s traditions, yearns for her presence at gatherings that she can rarely attend, creating an unspoken tension between duty and desire.
When a simple request to join a family BBQ turns into a desperate plea, the strain on their marriage becomes palpable. A small act of sabotage—her car’s deflated tires—casts a shadow of doubt and hurt, revealing the fragile cracks beneath their seemingly stable life.

AITA for using my husband’s car to get to work after he tricked me into going to his family’s BBQ party?
















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation starkly illustrates a complete failure of boundaries and communication, manifested through manipulative tactics by both parties.
The husband’s behavior—begging, pressuring friends to cover the OP’s shift, and ultimately tricking her by creating a mechanical failure and driving her to a distant location—is a severe breach of trust and autonomy. His actions demonstrate an attempt to control the OP’s choices by making her dependent on him for transport while simultaneously sabotaging her professional responsibilities. The OP, reacting to this high-pressure coercion and fearing job loss (a valid professional concern for a nurse with a demanding schedule), responded with an equally extreme, though reactive, measure: taking his property (the car keys) to ensure she could fulfill her duty. While her motivation was self-preservation regarding her career, stealing the keys and leaving without communication until later is a breakdown in partnership that justifies the husband’s perception of a breach of trust, albeit one initiated by his manipulation.
The OP’s actions were an understandable, desperate response to entrapment, but they were not constructive. For future similar conflicts, the OP should establish firm, non-negotiable professional boundaries *before* high-stakes events occur. If the husband resorts to manipulation again, the constructive response is immediate, non-emotional withdrawal from the situation (e.g., calling a cab or rideshare immediately upon realizing the deception) rather than retaliatory actions involving property or deliberate silence.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.



![[deleted] You need to get away from this guy: NTA...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/5d072f2f7184bbfe52f02c2155edb1d8.png)
















The original poster (OP) faced a significant conflict between professional obligations, necessary for job security, and her husband’s strong desire for her presence at a family event. The situation escalated when the husband used deception, involving tampering with her vehicle, to force her attendance, leading the OP to take drastic measures to fulfill her work commitment.
Did the OP’s actions of taking her husband’s car keys and driving to her shift, after being tricked into driving to a distant location, constitute an appropriate defense of her career against manipulative behavior, or was this extreme reaction an overstep that damaged the trust in the marriage?







