-
Woman driving a car, smiling while looking ahead.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
-
AITAH for getting my driver's license before my brother's wife?
-
-
-
-
-
Woman driving a car, smiling and looking to the side.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
-
-
The original plan to take lessons together was a reasonable enough idea on paper. Two people, same goal, shared schedule. Fine. What nobody apparently accounted for is that driving instructors evaluate students individually, and when one student is ready for the next test and the other needs more practice, the logical outcome is that they progress at different rates. This is not a betrayal. This is just how learning works.
-
-
-
The argument that she should have waited, knowing she was ready, knowing the heat was coming, knowing her sister-in-law had already failed a test, is the kind of request that sounds controlling the moment you say it out loud. Sit outside in scorching heat, delay your own progress, and put your timeline on hold indefinitely because someone else is struggling with parking. Out of respect. For the family.
-
Woman sitting in driver's seat, smiling at the camera.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
-
-
-
The cultural layer underneath all of this is where things get genuinely uncomfortable. A 21-year-old woman getting her license before her brother's wife should not register as an act of rebellion. It should register as a Tuesday. The fact that it caused a family argument, that the brother called their mother to intervene, that this is apparently still a point of contention, says a lot more about the expectations in the room than it does about anything she did wrong.
-
-
-
-
-
She agreed to start lessons together and she did. She passed her tests on schedule and moved forward. At no point did she sabotage anyone or take something that belonged to someone else. She just refused to artificially slow herself down to maintain an arrangement that stopped making practical sense.
-
-
-
-
The brother is upset that his younger sister did not listen to him. She is 21 and got her license in the summer. Some family wounds take a long time to heal and some were probably never that healthy to begin with.
-
-
Want More? Follow Us and Add Us as a Preferred Source on Google.