When the airline lost their luggage, a simple trip turned into a nightmare for the sister and her boyfriend. Desperate and overwhelmed, they faced cold indifference from the airline, who coldly insisted that their belongings could only be retrieved from the airport of origin—an impossible demand for the stranded couple.
In a final act of hope, the brother stepped into the unknown to recover what was lost. Navigating bureaucracy and doubt, he confronted barriers and skepticism, determined to reunite them with their precious possessions despite the mounting obstacles and emotional strain.

AITA for yelling at my sister for wasting my time on a pointless errand?










According to psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner, author of ‘The Dance of Anger,’ unclear communication and unspoken expectations are primary drivers of family conflict. When one party fails to accurately represent the scope or value of a request, the recipient often feels manipulated or taken advantage of, leading to disproportionate emotional reactions.
The poster (32M) entered this situation based on the agreed-upon term: retrieving a ‘suitcase,’ which implies valuable contents requiring significant effort. The sister (30F) and her boyfriend initiated the request, knowing the contents were minor (a small bag with cheap liquor and spoiled food) and failed to clearly convey this reality. This failure to respect the poster’s time investment—which included a two-hour delay and travel time—is the root cause of the anger. The sister’s defense, arguing that a favor should be done regardless of content, dismisses the value of the poster’s labor and autonomy.
The poster’s reaction, while emotionally charged (yelling), stemmed from a breach of implied trust regarding the nature of the favor. While yelling is generally inappropriate conflict resolution, the feeling of being misled about a time-consuming task is valid. Moving forward, the poster should establish clearer parameters for favors (e.g., ‘What exactly is in the bag and how much time will this take?’) before agreeing, and future disputes should be handled using ‘I’ statements rather than accusations, even when feeling wronged.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

She literally sent you on a 2 hour journey (there and back again), not for the one ring or other precious family heirlooms like a curling iron, but for moldy cheese and cheap liquor. Like WTF were you supposed to do with that crap? Consume it? Mail it to her?


Who is soooo distraught about a bag that has every day cheap rum and moldy cheese so much that they then tell you, on your own trip, to go get a “suitcase” that puts you out hours of your life?

![[deleted] NTA](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/14b5c3e09c6d5f006ebcb372d59bb968.png)
Sounds like my partners life, running around after his mum and sisters whilst they sit on their entitled, fat arses going “steeeeeeveeee” or whatever male they have convinced to do their bidding. Make it the last time she’s an adult she can sort out her own life




The poster felt intensely frustrated after spending significant time on an errand that yielded only spoiled items, leading to an angry confrontation with their sister. The core conflict lies between the poster’s expectation of a worthwhile favor and the sister’s downplaying of the effort required versus the actual outcome.
Was the poster justified in reacting angrily to what they perceived as a waste of their valuable time and misleading information, or should they have honored the commitment regardless of the contents, given the request was a favor for family?







