A weary mother, worn down by the relentless demands of her physically exhausting job, stands firm against the tide of frustration and fatigue. She has promised her daughter a chance to practice driving, but only on her own terms—ready to step out the door the moment she arrives home, or not at all. This boundary is not just about driving; it’s about respect, responsibility, and the hard-earned wisdom of a woman who refuses to be taken for granted.
Her daughter, a bright but time-challenged teenager on the spectrum, battles her own struggles with punctuality and self-management. The mother’s love is fierce, tempered by the need to teach her child resilience and accountability in a world that demands both. Their simple argument unfolds as a poignant clash of endurance and empathy, a moment where love wrestles with limits, and growth is forged in the fire of everyday trials.

AITA for refusing to take my teen driving











As renowned psychologist Dr. Nedra Glover Tawwab explains, “Boundaries are not about controlling other people; they are about knowing what you will or will not accept from others and communicating those limits.”
The situation highlights a classic tension between parental responsibility, accommodating a disability (ASD), and maintaining necessary personal boundaries. The OP, as a single working mother in a physically demanding job, has a valid need to protect her limited recovery time. Her advance warning regarding sitting down removes the element of surprise; she set a clear, actionable expectation for her daughter. While the daughter’s time management issues are linked to ASD, the OP is correct that accommodations should not excuse chronic disrespect for others’ time, especially in scheduling joint activities. The daughter’s decision to shower after being explicitly told to be ready, knowing the OP would leave immediately upon arrival, demonstrated a failure to prioritize the agreed-upon plan over her own immediate needs.
The OP’s action was appropriate given the established, critical boundary and the chronic nature of the behavior. To handle future situations more effectively, the OP could implement a structured consequence system rather than relying solely on a single-instance threat. For example, clearly stating that missing the ready-by time results in the cancellation of that specific driving session *and* the loss of the next scheduled practice session could reinforce the importance of timely compliance without requiring the OP to violate her own physical limits.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.







































The original poster (OP) felt physically exhausted after a demanding workday and clearly communicated a firm condition for taking her daughter driving: the daughter needed to be ready immediately upon the OP’s arrival home. The central conflict arises because the daughter, struggling with time management due to ASD, failed to meet this condition, leading the OP to follow through on her boundary, which the daughter perceived as unreasonable.
Given the OP’s clear prior communication versus the daughter’s ongoing difficulty with time management and respect for agreed-upon schedules, was the OP justified in refusing to drive after sitting down, or did her exhaustion warrant a momentary exception for her daughter’s recognized challenges?







