Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Man Drives Away After Chronically Late Friend Misses His Pickup Deadline, Causing Her To Miss A Crucial PhD Seminar

by Layla Bui
February 9, 2026
in Social Issues

Friendships often come with small annoyances that people learn to tolerate over time. Being a few minutes late once in a while is usually no big deal, especially when life gets busy. But when lateness becomes a constant pattern, it can slowly turn from a minor quirk into a serious source of resentment.

The original poster explains that his friend is chronically late to everything, no matter how important the occasion is. After her tardiness started affecting his own work schedule, he decided to draw a hard line when she asked for a ride on a particularly important day.

He made his expectations clear, but when the morning arrived, things did not go as promised. What happened next left their friendship hanging by a thread. Scroll down to see how one strict boundary led to major consequences.

One man leaves his friend behind after she misses a strict pickup time

Man Drives Away After Chronically Late Friend Misses His Pickup Deadline, Causing Her To Miss A Crucial PhD Seminar
Not the actual photo

AITA for making my chronically late friend miss her seminar?

My friend [25F] is constantly late for everything.

Be it work-related or fun activities, she will always be at least 15-20 minute late.

She does not have a car, and so oftentimes I [25M] will pick her up from her house

(I work at a university and she is a PhD student there,

and her place is along the way for me).

Last time I offered her a ride to work,

she ended up being 20 minutes late after I've already arrived at her place.

Because of that, I ended up being late for work.

She is always very apologetic about her lateness, but never changes.

This week she was supposed to give a seminar at the university

which is a crucial part of her PhD program.

She asked me if I could give her a ride to work that day.

I told her sure, but that I was picking her up at 8 AM

and she must be there exactly at 8 AM, and not a minute later.

She chuckled, but I told her I wasn't joking, and she promised that she will be there.

The morning of her seminar, I drove to her place and got there at 7:55,

and texted her that I was here,

and she told me should would be out in "just a minute".

At 8:00, there was no indication that she would come out

(and she didn't text anything), so at 8:01, I drove off.

At around 8:20, she called me asking me where I was.

I told her I was at work and that I wasn't joking

when I told her that she had to be ready right that minute.

She started screaming and crying over the phone, and told me

that she was having a hard time that morning couldn't be ready right at 8 AM.

She then begged me to come back to pick up her,

as her seminar is at 9 AM and she needed to be at the school before then.

I could've done it quick enough to pick her up and drop her off without affecting my work,

but I decided I didn't want to do that, and told her that I won't.

She was crying and hyperventilating at that point

and said she'd promise to never be late for anything else again,

and reemphasized that this seminar was crucial for her PhD

and that she absolutely cannot miss it without severe consequence.

I responded "oh well", and hung up.

I then went about my day at work normally.

I feel like could've went back and picked her up in this scenario

since it wouldn't have been detrimental

to me and at the same time this was something very important for her.

On the other hand, I feel like this should be a wake-up call for her chronic lateness..

EDIT: thank you everyone for the kind words..

To answer a few common questions:

Yes, she did miss her seminar and apparently got into big trouble with the school.

I don't think it's going to ruin her PhD, but there definitely are consequences.

Regarding our friendship, it was already on its way out

when this happened, and now we haven't talked at all for a while.

There’s a quiet resentment that builds when one person keeps showing up on time while another treats time as flexible

Many people recognize the emotional fatigue of repeatedly adjusting their own schedule, absorbing inconvenience, and telling themselves it’s “not a big deal,” until one day it finally is.

In this situation, the OP wasn’t simply deciding whether to give a friend a ride. He was confronting a long-standing imbalance in responsibility.

His friend’s chronic lateness didn’t just affect casual plans; it repeatedly interfered with his own workday. While she was consistently apologetic, nothing ever changed.

Over time, those apologies lost their emotional weight because the burden of her lateness kept falling on him. On the morning of her seminar, his decision to leave at 8:01 wasn’t impulsive.

It was the culmination of many moments where his time had been treated as secondary, despite clear communication and warnings.

At first glance, the OP’s choice seems cold, especially given the importance of the seminar. But there’s another psychological perspective that reframes the moment.

Chronic lateness often creates an unspoken dependency: the late person assumes others will absorb the consequences. In this case, the friend didn’t call at 8:02 or 8:05.

She waited until 8:20, suggesting she still believed he would wait or return. From her perspective, urgency only arrived once the safety net disappeared.

From his perspective, going back would have reinforced a pattern where boundaries were never taken seriously. Psychologist Susan Krauss Whitbourne, PhD, explains in Psychology Today that chronic lateness is often linked to time-based prospective memory and time estimation bias.

Research shows that some people genuinely misjudge how long tasks take, especially when distracted or emotionally preoccupied. They may believe “just a minute” has passed when far more time has elapsed.

However, Whitbourne emphasizes that understanding the cognitive roots of lateness does not remove responsibility. Adults who struggle with time perception must use external strategies, such as clock-checking, buffer time, and firm routines, to prevent their difficulty from negatively affecting others.

This insight sheds light on why both people in the story were emotionally overwhelmed. The friend may not have intended disrespect, but intention doesn’t erase impact.

Meanwhile, the OP had reached a point where accommodating her lateness meant sacrificing his own professional reliability. By leaving, he stopped compensating for a problem that wasn’t his to fix.

The distress that followed was painful, but it also exposed how much the friendship relied on his flexibility rather than mutual respect.

This situation invites a broader reflection: empathy should help us understand behavior, not excuse it indefinitely.

Boundaries are often misunderstood as punishment, when they are actually a form of self-preservation. Sometimes, the moment that feels most unforgiving is the one that finally makes a pattern visible.

And while that visibility can cost a friendship, it also clarifies an important truth: respect for time is, ultimately, respect for people.

Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

These commenters felt the warning was clear and responsibility was hers

WhizzoButterBoy − NTA. You warned her.

She also had 40 minutes to make other arrangements even after all her procrastination

Could you have been kinder?

Yes. Could you have reminded her about your time restrictions? Yes Could you have given her a “final notice”

with an “I’m going to drive away at 8:00”.

Yes Is it RUDE AF to be continuously late?

Hell Yes Is she an adult? Yes Is it your problem to manage her time?

No Still NTA Edit: Wow, thank you for the awards !

I’m truly humbled by your appreciation! Thank you

j_j_footy − When you said you left at 8:01 I was thinking AH,

but when she didn't call you until 8:20

I laughed and thought oh no definitely NTA.

your friend needs to learn that punctuality in the professional world is important.

Also her chronic lateness should not be affecting you getting to work on time.

Muswell42 − NTA. If someone's a PhD candidate,

that person is capable of setting an alarm,

and should know the importance of time management.

It's not as if you didn't warn her.

They shared similar experiences and supported firm boundaries

Straight-Singer-2912 − NTA. I had a friend like this.

I was left at the movies, restaurants, train stations

she was NEVER EVER on time, always apologetic, etc. etc.

Finally I just started leaving

after 15 minutes (which even that seemed like a long time

when you're waiting at a restaurant).

I was also told after I left the first time "I'll never be late again, I promise".

But she was. And then the friendship faded away.

Which was OK by me, my stomach was always in knots

and I was ALWAYS frustrated and angry by the time she showed up

that I finally realized I wasn't enjoying myself.

Clearly your friend showed up at 8:20 and expected you to idly wait for her like her chauffeur.

It is so disrespectful of your time.

Frankly, I'd be OK with not having this "friend".

ShootFrameHang − NTA I did this to my two younger sisters in high school.

I had to work, and they wanted to go to the mall that day.

They promised if I brought them, they would meet me at the front by noon.

They never showed and ignored the intercom pre cellphones.

I left them and went to work.

Five hours later, they found someone to bring them home.

Mum tried to tear me a new one until she heard my side.

They were never late again because I never drove them anywhere again.

If she can't respect your time enough to adjust hers, she deserved it.

ChakraMama318 − NTA- welcome to your new shiny spine. Personally, I hate mornings.

They can all die in a fire. My body hurts, my brain is in a fog. I can’t think. It sucks.

You know what sucks worse? Being fired for constant tardiness.

Your friend needs to figure her s__t out.

At 25 this is a MAJOR adulting/survival skill she is missing

and you are not doing her any favors by driving her.

You are just going to get yourself in trouble by being distracted by her.

This group pointed out alternative transportation options existed

TheBabeFroman − NTA. Why didn’t she just call an Uber or taxi? If it was that important, she had other options available to her.

MaryVonDerInsel − NTA - there are Ubers and taxis. So she doesn‘t depend on you.

They questioned whether being “right” matters when friendships end

CochinNbrahma − Sometimes I wonder about these posts. Does it really matter if you were the AH or not?

Are you gonna show this post to your friend and go “well everyone on Reddit agrees with me,

so you have to get over it! ” Your friendship with her is effectively ruined.

Don’t get me wrong, I find it hilarious.

I spent last summer working with someone like this (but worse),

and she almost made me miss my flight because of her tardiness.

But like, sometimes it doesn’t matter if you’re the AH.

Sometimes it just matters if you want to keep being friends with someone.

This story struck a nerve because it mirrors a quiet struggle many people face: balancing compassion with self-respect. Some readers applauded the boundary, while others felt the timing made it unnecessarily harsh.

Was this a long-overdue wake-up call, or a lesson delivered at the worst possible moment? And when habits clash with careers, how much responsibility should friends shoulder? Share your thoughts below. This one clearly isn’t just about being on time.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 4/5 votes | 80%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 1/5 votes | 20%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/5 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/5 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/5 votes | 0%

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

Related Posts

Woman Parked In His Driveway Without Permission, So He Blocked Her In And Went On A Weekend Bender
Social Issues

Woman Parked In His Driveway Without Permission, So He Blocked Her In And Went On A Weekend Bender

6 months ago
Dad Shoos Loose Dog Away From Toddler At Park, Then Gets Blamed By Stranger For Not Helping Catch It
Social Issues

Dad Shoos Loose Dog Away From Toddler At Park, Then Gets Blamed By Stranger For Not Helping Catch It

3 months ago
Bridal Stylist Silently Fights Back After Bride’s Mom Trash-Talks in Spanish
Social Issues

Bridal Stylist Silently Fights Back After Bride’s Mom Trash-Talks in Spanish

5 months ago
Ex-Wife Refuses To Adopt Orphaned Daughter From Husband’s Affair After Tragic Car Crash
Social Issues

Ex-Wife Refuses To Adopt Orphaned Daughter From Husband’s Affair After Tragic Car Crash

2 months ago
Mom Demands Apology When Dog Barks, Owner Calls Out Her Parenting Instead
Social Issues

Mom Demands Apology When Dog Barks, Owner Calls Out Her Parenting Instead

2 months ago
Man Secretly Unpacks Girlfriend’s Hair Towel Before Family Trip Because He’s Afraid She’ll Look “Weird,” Now She Wants Space
Social Issues

Man Secretly Unpacks Girlfriend’s Hair Towel Before Family Trip Because He’s Afraid She’ll Look “Weird,” Now She Wants Space

2 months ago

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POST

Email me new posts

Email me new comments

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.




  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest

Recent Posts

No Content Available

Browse by Category

  • Blog
  • CELEB
  • Comics
  • DC
  • DISNEY
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • Illustrations
  • Lifestyle
  • MCU
  • MOVIE
  • News
  • NFL
  • Social Issues
  • Sport
  • Star Wars
  • TV

Follow Us

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Syndication
  • DMCA
  • Sitemap

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM