She had dreamed of the freedom that came with getting her license, the open road promising independence and adventure. But instead of soaring, she found herself trapped in a relentless cycle of responsibility, ferrying her younger siblings through chaotic mornings and endless traffic, her own desires sidelined and her youthful excitement dimmed.
What started as a simple favor turned into a burden disguised as a condition, a silent exploitation masked by laughter and expectation. The joy of driving became a daily grind, each trip a reminder of how her trust was twisted into servitude, leaving her isolated from friends and robbed of the freedom she had earned.

AITAH for riding my bike instead of driving my younger siblings to school unless I’m paid?















As renowned psychologist Dr. Henry Cloud explains, “. . . Boundaries define where you end and someone else begins.”
The core issue here revolves around a poorly defined agreement that quickly morphed into an expectation of unpaid labor leveraged against a desired privilege (the car). The initial reaction of the parents laughing when setting the terms suggests they understood the imbalance but proceeded anyway, establishing a dynamic where the OP’s needs were secondary to their logistical convenience. The OP’s motivation for withdrawing—that cycling is objectively easier and less restrictive—is a sound, self-preserving decision. They are not breaking a contractual obligation, but rather terminating the use of a provided resource under mutually agreed-upon (though unequal) terms.
The OP’s offer to be paid for driving was a mature attempt to re-establish fair boundaries by assigning monetary value to the emotional and time labor involved. The parents’ rejection of this, citing cost, confirms that their primary goal was securing free transportation rather than supporting the OP’s licensure experience. The OP’s action to return to cycling was appropriate because it removed them from an exploitative situation. Moving forward, any future assistance involving transportation or resources should be clearly documented with defined roles, expected compensation if labor is involved, and an explicit understanding that the privilege can be revoked by either party without penalty.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.














The original poster (OP) entered into an agreement believing they were gaining the benefit of a car, only to find the required driving responsibilities for younger siblings significantly disrupted their schedule and negated the personal value of having the car. When the arrangement became overly burdensome, the OP chose to revert to their previous, easier mode of transportation, which directly conflicts with the expectations and plans set by the mother and stepfather.
Since the OP has withdrawn from the driving arrangement because they no longer wish to use the car, is the mother and stepfather justified in treating this as a broken agreement, or is the OP fully within their rights to cease an arrangement that proved detrimental to their own well-being and schedule?







