A Reddit user kicked off 2025 with more drama than a reality TV pilot. A nurse, scheduled for a critical night shift on New Year’s Eve, ended up calling the police—not for a patient emergency, but for her own fiancé. Why? Because he took her car without permission to party with friends.
No, this isn’t fiction. She’d said no. He ignored her. She threatened to call the cops. He didn’t believe her—until flashing lights showed up at the bar.
Now, he’s furious, his friends aren’t speaking to him, and Reddit is doing what Reddit does best—unleashing their collective judgment. Let’s unpack this wild ride.
One nurse’s desperate stand to get her car back after her fiancé took it without permission on New Year’s Eve led to a police call and a relationship in tatters















Entitlement in relationships is a red flag that often hides under the guise of “partnership.” Dr. Lindsay Gibson, clinical psychologist and author of Adult Children of Emotionally Immature Parents, notes: “Emotionally immature people often assume others exist to serve their needs. When boundaries are set, they feel attacked—so they escalate instead of reflect.”
In this case, the fiancé wasn’t just pushing a limit—he obliterated it. He didn’t just take a car; he ignored her schedule, her profession, her stress, and ultimately her consent. That’s not “what’s yours is mine.” That’s manipulation.
What’s alarming is his attempt to flip the blame. “You ruined my New Year’s.” Translation? My fun matters more than your job. Let’s not forget—he had options. Uber. Friends. Literally any adult solution. Instead, he pulled a stunt that screams, “Your needs inconvenience me.”
According to the Gottman Institute, healthy relationships are built on mutual respect and shared decision-making—not coercion and guilt trips. In fact, the moment a partner starts giving you the silent treatment for asserting a boundary? That’s a psychological control tactic called stonewalling—a known predictor of relationship breakdown.
And then there’s the bigger social picture: women still carry the emotional labor of keeping peace, even when they’re the ones wronged. She was expected to absorb the blow quietly, risk her shift, and smile through it. But she didn’t—and Reddit had thoughts.
In the comments, some Redditors labeled the fiancé’s car grab as theft, praising OP for calling the police to protect her job and boundaries









Some flagged the fiancé’s disrespect and manipulation, urging her to reconsider the engagement before marrying





These Redditors noted the fiancé could’ve used Uber or a friend’s car, calling his choice to steal hers a deliberate disregard for her needs


This wasn’t just a lovers’ spat—it was a full-blown lesson in boundaries, trust, and self-respect. The fiancé crossed every line, then played the victim. But the nurse stood her ground, car keys and all.
Was calling the police extreme—or was it the only way to be heard when no one else was listening? Would you have reacted differently, or is this the exact wake-up call this relationship needed? Share your thoughts and red flags in the comments.









