Her 28-Year-Old Brother Won’t Drive Or Work. Now She’s Expected To Be His Full-Time Chauffeur

At first, it probably felt like a small favor.

A quick ride here. A drop-off there. The kind of thing you do for family without thinking too much about it.

But for one 21-year-old woman, that favor quietly turned into something much bigger. Something daily. Something expected.

Her older brother, 28 years old, doesn’t have a license. He doesn’t work. And somehow, she became his transportation plan.

Not occasionally. Not when it’s urgent.

Every single day.

Here’s The Original Post:

'AITA for not wanting to drive my 28 year old brother everywhere?'

My brother who is 28 years old refuses to get a a licence and doesn't work expects me 21 years old to drive him everywhere.

I don't mind driving him around occasionally but he literally wants me to drive him every day and its taking up all my free time from work.

If I refuse he calls my mum and she guilt trips me into taking him.

She's even making me take him to all his appointments on my birthday which is my one full day off from work.

When Helping Turns Into Obligation

She doesn’t mind helping sometimes. That’s important. This isn’t someone unwilling to support her family.

The problem is the scale.

Driving him around has started eating into her free time, the little bit she has left after work. It’s no longer a favor. It’s a routine. One she didn’t agree to.

And when she tries to say no, the situation doesn’t just stop there.

It escalates.

Her brother calls their mom. And her mom steps in, not to find a solution, but to pressure her. Guilt, expectation, the familiar “family helps family” narrative.

It’s effective. Because it works.

Even on her birthday, her one full day off, she’s being told to spend it driving him to appointments.

That’s not helping anymore. That’s sacrificing.

The Dynamic That Keeps This Going

What’s happening here is something a lot of families fall into without realizing it.

One person avoids responsibility. Another person steps in to fill the gap. And over time, that arrangement becomes normal.

In psychology, this is often described as enabling behavior. Organizations like the American Psychological Association discuss how consistently stepping in to solve someone else’s responsibilities can actually prevent them from developing independence.

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That doesn’t mean she’s doing something wrong intentionally. It means the system around her has slowly trained her into this role.

Her brother doesn’t need to get a license. He has her.

He doesn’t need to figure things out. Someone else already is.

And her mom, instead of pushing him toward independence, reinforces it by pressuring her to keep helping.

Why This Feels So Hard to Stop

From the outside, the solution sounds simple. Just say no.

But in reality, it’s not that easy.

Because this isn’t just about driving.

It’s about family roles. Expectations. The fear of being seen as selfish. The discomfort of conflict.

When she says no, she’s not just refusing a ride. She’s pushing back against a system that everyone else seems comfortable with.

And that comes with emotional consequences.

Guilt. Pushback. Maybe even anger.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth.

Those reactions don’t mean she’s wrong.

They mean the dynamic is being challenged.

The Turning Point

There’s one detail that really highlights how far this has gone.

Her birthday.

A day that’s supposed to be hers. A rare full day off. And instead of being able to enjoy it, she’s being scheduled as a driver.

That’s the kind of moment that forces clarity.

Because if there’s no boundary there, where is the boundary?

Helping occasionally is one thing. Being expected to rearrange your life, even on your own day, is something else entirely.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Most people didn’t hesitate. They said she’s not in the wrong.

PetiteGardener144 − You need to grow a spine. And realise you are in fact an adult.

So you are allowed to wear the big girl pants. "No. " Is a complete sentence. Even for your mum. Try it.

Once you do it once, they get the idea. If not, there's this amazing invention called repetition.

Mera1506 − NTA, tell mom she can drive him.

AdMost546 − NTA. He’s 28, unemployed, won’t get a license and somehow you’re the chauffeur?

That’s not helping, that’s enabling. Your time isn’t free just because you have a car.

And your mom guilt-tripping you (on your birthday? ?) is wild. Set the boundary now if fine to help occasionally, daily taxi service is not.

The word that came up again and again was “enabling.” Not as an insult, but as a pattern. A situation where her help is actually allowing her brother to avoid growing up.

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greyhounds4life1969 − You're an adult, act like one and say no.

ClytemnestraAndAggie − NTA There's a really good BestOf about a Scottish family that coddled the brother, to the dismay of the sisters,

to the point where one moved to London and ceased contact with the parents/brother.

The other sister sat down and asked the parents what the long-term plan was for the deadbeat brother that doesn't contribute anything,

because the sisters sure as hell weren't going to care for him after the parents are gone.

You parent(s) risk alienating you for life by always choosing him over you, and they need to know this. If you live with them, move out.

If you don't, tell them to figure t out for themselves.

mickmun − NTA. This is called enabling. Have Mom look it up and read you the definition before you agree to provide another ride.

Others pointed out the role of the mother, noting that the real responsibility should fall on her, not the younger sibling who’s already working and managing her own life.

i_own_5_cats − tell your mum if she wants him driven, she can do it herself or pay you like uber

canvasshoes2 − NTA. Let your mom guilt trip you. Sounds as if it's time to go low contact with both of them.

Nester1953 − The problem here is that you can't seem to say no and stick to it.

You allow yourself to be manipulated by your brother and by your mum.

Will they angry with you and say you're an ungrateful daughter and you're selfish and family helps family and you're a bad sister and a disappointment?

Yes. Will any of this be true? No.

No is a complete sentence. Start using it. You can be very polite about it, but for heaven's sake,,

when you say you're busy or you can't, stay with "it just won't work for me, sorry, gotta run! " as opposed to offering explanations

or justifications. Perhaps your firm stance will help nudge your brother toward learning to drive and becoming employed.

Both of which would be desirable outcomes. NTA.

UnlikelyEntrance3438 − Your mom needs to step up and take responsibility and stop treating him like a baby.

Your not a taxi cab. Unless its an emergency you don't owe him anything.

Her brother is 28. At some point, his life has to become his responsibility. Not hers.

And her time, her energy, her one day off, those things matter too.

Saying no might feel uncomfortable at first. It might even cause tension.

But there’s a bigger question underneath all of this.

If she doesn’t stop now, when does it ever end?

 

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