She has poured her heart into every mile driven, every favor done, hoping love would flow as freely back to her. Their story began in the quiet hum of car rides home, a simple act that blossomed into three years of shared moments and silent sacrifices. But beneath the surface of her unwavering support lies a growing ache—an exhaustion not just of body, but of spirit, craving a love that mirrors her own devotion.
He is gentle, patient, and caring, yet his fears and past traumas create invisible barriers between them. While she gives endlessly, he hesitates to step into independence, caught in the shadows of loss and family history. In their dance of love and reliance, she wonders if the balance will ever shift—if she will ever feel the love she so deeply deserves.

AITAH for telling my boyfriend I might break up with him if he doesn’t get his license?










According to licensed marriage and family therapists like Dr. Terri Cole, healthy relationships require both partners to take responsibility for their own well-being and contribute equally to the logistics of shared life, often referred to as ‘adulting.’ The issue here is less about driving itself and more about the demonstrated commitment to shared responsibility and future planning.
The boyfriend presents two primary barriers: a severe past trauma related to driving accidents and a convenient rationalization (needing a car to get a license). While the trauma is a legitimate psychological barrier requiring empathy, relying on it to avoid a necessary life skill at age 25, especially when it places an excessive burden on the partner, signals a boundary violation regarding emotional labor and fairness. The original poster correctly identifies that this lack of initiative impacts her vision for the future, particularly regarding major life steps like marriage or raising children, which require logistical parity.
The original poster’s actions (voluntarily driving) have inadvertently enabled the avoidance behavior. A constructive next step involves clearly communicating that this is no longer a negotiable convenience but a necessary life skill for the future of the relationship. A professional recommendation would be for the couple to seek counseling to address the fear component, coupled with a firm, non-negotiable timeline for him to begin the licensing process, regardless of car ownership.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.







































The original poster is facing significant exhaustion and emotional distress due to the continuous burden of driving her boyfriend everywhere, a situation she views as an imbalance in their shared responsibilities. While the relationship offers care and support in other areas, the boyfriend’s lack of initiative regarding obtaining a driver’s license creates a central conflict against the poster’s deeply held need for reciprocal effort and shared independence.
Should the original poster prioritize her immediate need for independence and shared life responsibilities, even if it means risking a long-term relationship that is otherwise loving, or is the boyfriend’s significant, documented fear of driving a valid reason to indefinitely defer this expectation within the partnership?







