The individual (22F) describes her deep involvement in her older brother Liam’s (28M) recent engagement to Charlotte (26F). She actively supported the process, helping with decisions like selecting the engagement ring and enduring stressful planning details, including a conflict over napkin colors.
Suddenly, Charlotte informed her that she was removed from the bridal party, citing concerns from Liam that the poster’s ongoing mental health issues might cause drama at the wedding. Although the poster acknowledges a difficult year involving a breakup, therapy, and diagnoses of anxiety and depression, she states she has been stable and has not disrupted family events. When Liam later asked her casually to drive him to the venue due to a scheduling change, she declined, stating she was too unstable to drive, which resulted in family members accusing her of being petty and immature.

AITAH for refusing to drive my brother to his own wedding after he told his fiancée I’m “too unstable” to be a bridesmaid?










As licensed marriage and family therapist Dr. Nedra Glover Tawwab explains, “Boundaries are the standards we set for ourselves about what is acceptable behavior from others.”
The poster’s removal from the wedding party, attributed to her brother’s anxiety about her mental health potentially causing ‘drama,’ represents a significant breach of trust and validation. While the poster has been actively supportive, her value as a sibling was suddenly conditional on her perceived emotional stability for the event. When Liam subsequently requested a favor, her refusal was a direct, albeit emotionally charged, attempt to enforce a boundary following perceived disrespect. In this context, the family’s reaction (guilt-tripping) suggests a pattern where the poster’s needs are secondary to maintaining family harmony or the couple’s image.
The poster’s action of refusing the drive, while understandable as a response to feeling marginalized, might escalate conflict rather than resolve it. A more constructive approach would be to communicate clearly about the hurt caused by the exclusion *before* being asked for a favor, or to state clearly that while she is hurt by the exclusion, she can still attend as a guest if that is what is truly desired, rather than weaponizing her health status. Moving forward, establishing clear, non-conditional boundaries regarding her participation in family events is crucial.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.



















The core conflict revolves around the poster being excluded from a major role in her brother’s wedding based on perceived mental health instability, only to be immediately asked to provide logistical support. Her reaction was to refuse this request as a form of self-protection and response to the disrespect shown by her exclusion.
The central debate is whether the poster was justified in prioritizing her emotional boundaries by refusing the driving request, or if this action was an inappropriate, retaliatory response to her brother’s lack of support. Readers must weigh the need for family unity against the right to refuse requests when feeling slighted or unsupported.







