Wife Runs Out Of Gas, And He Refuses To Leave Work, Now She’s Angry And Says She Can’t Count On Him

In relationships, there are moments when one partner’s needs clash with the other’s responsibilities, leading to tough decisions. That’s what one man found when his wife ran out of gas during a visit to her sister, and he couldn’t leave work to help her.

He offered multiple suggestions, including calling her sister, using AAA, or finding an Uber, but his wife wanted him to drop everything and come help. When he couldn’t leave work, she got upset, and their communication broke down.

Now, she’s refusing to speak to him, and he’s questioning if he was wrong for not leaving work.

Wife Runs Out Of Gas, And He Refuses To Leave Work, Now She’s Angry And Says She Can’t Count On Him
Not the actual photo

'AITA For not leaving work to help my wife when she ran out of gas?'

My wife (38F) and I (41M) have been married for 11 years and have 2 kids (9 & 7).

I work full-time, and she works part-time while also doing online classes to finish her degree (she dropped out of college after 2 years and wants to finish).

She has ADHD and anxiety, and, if I'm being honest, sometimes it feels like our entire lives revolve around her symptoms.

Last Friday, my wife didn't have to work and decided to go visit her sister who lives in a small town about 45-minutes away.

She didn't tell me she was going, so I was very surprised when she called me shortly after noon.

She was obviously upset when I answered, and between sobs, I was able to make out that there was an issue with the car.

Eventually, she calmed down and told me that she ran out of gas "in the middle of nowhere" and didn't know what to do.

Because she hadn't told me she was visiting her sister, I was very confused and had a lot of questions, which only made her more upset.

I was getting frustrated, too, so I finally just asked her what she wanted me to do.

She told me she needed me to come help her. I told her I was at work and had meetings in the afternoon that I couldn't skip.

I suggested she call her sister, but she went to work after my wife visited, and my wife didn't want to bother her.

I suggested she call AAA to come help, but she said she didn't know how to do that.

I suggested she call an Uber, but she was in the middle of nowhere and didn't see any cars available.

I suggested she call a friend or someone else who might be able to help, and she yelled at me to "Just come fu&$ing help her."

I tried to remain calm and reiterated that I am sorry she's in this position, but at this moment, I am unable to help her.

I told her I had offered numerous suggestions that she could try to help herself, but I can't leave work.

She then hung up on me. My first meeting of the afternoon was starting in 5 minutes, so I tried calling her back, and she didn't answer.

I kept trying to text her during my meeting, too, but she never responded.

I tried calling again between my meetings, and still no answer.

Which I admit pissed me off because even if I was trying to come help at that point, I couldn't reach her.

She is the one who picks up our kids from school, so I was kind of freaking out at this point because I was

completely in the dark about whether I would need to get them or if my wife was OK.

So, I called the school and asked them to please let me know if my wife comes to get the kids because I can't reach her.

I didn't include any details about why. The school called me back at pick-up time and told me that my wife was there for pickup.

When I got home at the end of the day, my wife refused to talk to me. She gave me the cold shoulder the entire weekend.

I apologized for not being able to help multiple times. Finally, this morning she spoke to me, but all she said was "I can't count on you anymore."

Did I really mess up that badly? Am I the jerk for this?

At first glance, what happened last Friday might read like a logistical conflict, “she needed help, he couldn’t drop everything”, but the emotional weight runs much deeper.

This situation touches on core elements of relationship functioning: stress, emotional support, and how partners navigate crises together.

When one partner is already dealing with anxiety, and when ADHD or related challenges are involved, everyday setbacks can be experienced as amplified threats to safety, support, and trust.

In intimate relationships, research shows that how partners respond to one another in stressful situations matters immensely.

Supportive interactions, whether emotional reassurance or practical help, are linked to better relationship quality and reduced negative conflict.

Conversely, repeated unmet needs and lack of support often predict more frustration and lower satisfaction over time.

That doesn’t mean the OP is callous or uncaring. He offered concrete suggestions: call AAA, contact her sister, use Uber. From a practical problem‑solving perspective, those options were reasonable.

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But emotional distress doesn’t respond to rational solutions alone, especially when stress, anxiety, or executive functioning challenges (common in adult ADHD) are involved.

Adults with ADHD often experience heightened emotional reactions and difficulty regulating stress, which can intensify perceived urgency and threat in moments like running out of gas unexpectedly.

Psychological research on caregiving in intimate relationships shows how important both instrumental support (tangible help) and emotional support (reassurance, presence, empathy) are in creating feelings of safety and connection.

Supportive behaviors improve psychological well‑being and relationship quality when they help the partner feel understood, cared for, and not alone in a moment of difficulty.

The OP’s wife wasn’t just stranded without gas; she was in a vulnerable state, upset, emotional, and alone in an unfamiliar situation.

For many people with anxiety or emotional dysregulation, being heard, comforted, and validated can be as important as a practical solution.

Dissatisfaction with partner support, especially during high‑stress moments, is strongly linked with feelings of insecurity and abandonment in relationships.

At the same time, external stress, like work obligations, can spill over into relationship dynamics, creating tension.

Research on couples emphasizes that external stressors, including work demands, often interact with everyday couple functioning and can negatively affect relationship satisfaction if not navigated together with empathy and mutual support.

In this context, while the OP’s response was logically reasonable, it may have fallen short of providing the emotional reassurance his wife needed at that moment.

When she reached out, upset, scared, and sobbing, his inability to be physically present combined with questions about why she didn’t tell him her plans may have unintentionally communicated emotional distance instead of empathy.

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In relationships, emotional support often carries more weight in moments of distress than problem‑solving alone.

This doesn’t necessarily mean he “messed up badly.” But it does highlight a disconnect between his practical logic and her emotional experience.

A partner’s sense of being supported often hinges more on emotional attunement, listening, validating feelings, expressing care, than on the specific solution offered. Genuine reassurance can mitigate anxiety more effectively than offering alternatives when someone is in crisis.

Moving forward, rebuilding trust and connection in this marriage likely requires both partners to explore how they communicate and respond during stressful events.

The OP might express understanding of how scared and helpless his wife felt, separate from whether it was practical to help immediately.

Meanwhile, she could reflect on why her reaction was so strong and how she might communicate needs in future moments of stress.

Therapists often describe this kind of mutual attunement and repair as essential to long‑term relationship resilience.

What this story ultimately highlights is not just a disagreement, but how emotional support and perception of care matter deeply in relationships, especially when stress, anxiety, and neurodiversity intersect.

The core message is that relationships thrive not only on finding solutions, but on being there for one another when things feel overwhelming.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

This group emphasized that the wife’s behavior is a prime example of “weaponized incompetence.”

GreekAmericanDom − NTA. Your wife just proved that she was, in fact, able to deal with this situation herself.

I have zero patience for adults who can't manage situations like this.

a) It was of her own making.

b) There were so many options for solving it. And dropping everything to go save her? That just enables her dysfunction further.

It teaches her that she doesn't need to be responsible for herself. And the silent treatment?

That's a form of controlling behavior and emotional abuse. You need to sit your wife down and give her a stern talking-to.

She is the AH. Be sure to point out everything I shared here.

DCpurpleTart33 − Obviously this wife was having a moment and once she took a deep breath probably realized

she had 15 different ways to solve the problem herself, but she was b__t hurt that OP wouldn't immediately save her

like the princess she wants to be. OP is not the AH. Wifey needs to take some adulting classes if she can't figure out

a phone call to AAA (the best $100 a year I ever spend) or calling someone who wasn't working... clearly she figured it out.

Yelling in the moment I get, being frustrated with your partner because they couldn't immediately save you- not right, but I get it...

But still being mad and saying she can't count on you? Sheesh.

To be fair, she doesn't sound like SHE is someone that can be counted on either. LOL.

zxylady − If your wife can't order AAA by herself, she probably shouldn't be allowed to drive or take care of children.

What does she do when she has to take her kids to the doctor and has to fill out their names on a form 😬🫣 Good Lord man?

Quick-Possession-245 − She shouldn't be driving any distance if she can't call AAA. She is a parent of 2 children.

If she can't resolve calling AAA for help, how can she be responsible for 2 children?

This is weaponized incompetence if ever I have heard of it. NTA.

These users pointed out that while anxiety and ADHD can be challenging, they are not excuses for neglecting basic responsibilities.

ColorMyTrauma − NTA, once you mentioned that you have AAA. All you have to do is call the number on the card and answer their questions.

Hell, they have an app you can use to 'call' for help, you don't even have to make a phone call.

Everyone makes mistakes, and I don't think she's TA for running out of gas.

But she is a TA for the way she treated you. It sounds like you were willing to stay on the phone and calm her down,

which is all I'd personally ask from a partner in that situation.

I think she relies a little too heavily on you; she needs to buck up and act like an adult.

grosbeak22 − NTA. I think the buzzword that applies here is “weaponized incompetence.”

bruhggle − NTA. Your wife sure is tho. She is a grown adult.

A diagnosis is not a free ticket to push all your adult responsibilities onto someone else.

She should have checked her gas tank at some point after the 45-minute drive there.

She should have been an adult and used basic problem-solving skills, like walking her ass to the nearest gas station.

And then she actively dodged your calls afterwards? Interesting how she called and tried to insist you leave work,

but refused to call her sister because she'd left for work, most likely somewhere much closer to her.

Finally, this morning she spoke to me, but all she said was "I can't count on you anymore." It seems like you've never been able to count on her.

not to behave like an adult, not to manage her emotions, not to manage her responsibilities, and not to avoid sabotaging your job.

rosiet1001 − If you're not capable of checking the levels, calling AAA, or sorting out some other help, then you can't be making journeys like that.

I would be worried about the safety of my children in the car with her.

These commenters highlighted the absurdity of not knowing how to use simple services like AAA in today’s world.

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iheartwords − NTA. She is a grown woman who is responsible enough to take care of children and hold a job, so she should be capable of calling AAA.

Jellybeans74 − NTA … Why couldn’t she call AAA?

TheSassiestPanda − She doesn’t know how to call AAA? 🙄 NTA.

cheesefrieswithgravy − These symptoms aren’t anxiety and adhd. They are who she is. NTA.

This sounds exhausting. How does she not know how to “call” AAA?

It’s a literal app on your phone, and you just press the button that you need help, and it sends them your location. I have anxiety and ADHD.

I’m also recently divorced and can function and survive on my own just fine, and have used AAA many times.

No reason for you to leave work for this. Next time, tell her what to do to get roadside assistance,

but if she’s like this all of the time, it’s time to see  a psychiatrist for some medication because she’s truly not functional.

emotional_lemon8 − NTA. How does a grown adult not know how to call AAA?

Purpledemon1128 − NTA. I have ADHD and anxiety. Last year, I got a flat tire on a busy interstate with two kids in the car while my husband was at...

I called him to let him know the situation, but never asked (or expected) him to leave work. I called my insurance provided roadside assistance.

They sent a guy to my location to fix the flat, then I was on my way. When you're an adult, you have to do adult things despite ADHD and...

Various-Ocelot-2209 − NTA. There were many possible solutions to this problem. Is your wife actually incapable of calling AAA?

It’s clear that OP is stuck in a tough situation, balancing empathy for his wife’s struggles with frustration over her inability to manage basic tasks.

Do you think OP should keep supporting her in these moments, or is it time for a more direct conversation about responsibility and independence? Share your thoughts below!

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