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Friend Ditches Late Woman And 4-Year-Old At Restaurant To Prove A Crucial Point

by Jeffrey Stone
December 14, 2025
in Social Issues

A longtime friendship hit rough waters when a child-free Redditor grew weary of always trekking 45 minutes to visit her stay-at-home pal and her energetic four-year-old daughter. After years of bending over backward to fit the little one’s needs, they pushed for halfway meetups, hoping for some balance. Spoiler: the plan backfired.

Fed up, OP warned that one more delay meant they’d walk out after half an hour. When it happened again, they waited exactly that long, then ducked into a nearby coffee shop to spot the friend rushing in over an hour tardy. Furious messages flew, branding OP heartless for not grasping parenting chaos.

A Redditor left a restaurant meetup after a parent friend was chronically late.

Friend Ditches Late Woman And 4-Year-Old At Restaurant To Prove A Crucial Point
Not the actual photo.

'AITA for ditching my friend and her toddler at a restaurant because they were late?'

My friend ("Samantha") is a stay-at-home mom and has a four-year-old daughter ("Katie").

Since her daughter's birth, she always insisted that I go to her place if I ever wanted to hang out.

Even though she lives about 45 minutes away from me, I always did it in the beginning

because I did value our friendship, and Katie was her first, so I could understand how she'd be stressed with a newborn.

Recently, I started to put my foot down and wanted her to meet me halfway.

I felt like her kid (she only has Katie) was old enough to handle being outside and I was tired of driving just to hang at her house.

We always picked a place halfway, so I felt like it was doable.

During the last three hangouts, she was over 30 minutes late, and each time she claimed that she got "mom privileges" for being late

because she had to wrangle her kid into the car and do other "mom things" I wouldn't understand (according to her, I'm childless).

She asked to hang out this past weekend, and I told her that if she was late again, I'd leave.

Lo and behold, the day came and she was late. After 30 minutes, I got up and left,

but went to hang in the coffeeshop across the street because I was curious just how late she'd be.

She was over an hour late, and when she found out from the waitress that I left, she started to call and text me.

She said that I was callous and selfish for making her drive 25 minutes away from home with a toddler only to leave, and that she only ever came out...

I told her that I hang out with multiple friends who bring their kids out with us, and they're never late,

so it was pretty s__tty to blame being late on Katie (who is a perfectly sweet girl.

She's never been a problem during our outings). Samantha just kept pulling the "you're not a mom so you wouldn't get it" card.

I heard later from a mutual friend that Samantha has been blasting me in their mommy group and said I was bullying her for putting her child first.

I feel like her reaction wouldn't be so strong unless she was actually upset, so I'm starting to kind of feel like an AH.

I mean, she's right that I don't "get it" as I don't have children, but I still feel annoyed that she's late and feel justified for leaving.

My time is precious too! I'm not sure whether or not I should reach out.

Navigating plans with parent friends can sometimes feel like juggling flaming torches. One wrong move, and everyone’s a bit singed. In this case, a clear boundary was set after repeated delays, leading to a no-show that sparked major drama.

On one hand, parenting a young child brings unpredictable moments, like last-minute outfit changes or unexpected meltdowns. Occasional grace for those hiccups makes sense. After all, life with kids isn’t always a perfectly timed symphony.

But when lateness becomes the norm, let’s say over 30 minutes each time, and once exceeding an hour, then it shifts from understandable to disrespectful of the other person’s schedule.

The friend’s insistence on “mom privileges” and dismissing the child-free perspective with “you wouldn’t get it” adds a layer of condescension, turning a simple timing issue into a value clash.

From the Redditor’s side, consistently driving far in the past showed real effort to maintain the friendship. Asking to meet midway was a reasonable step toward balance, especially as the child grows older and outings become easier.

Setting a 30-minute limit and following through was protecting their own time after fair warnings. Leaving quietly and curiously watching from afar avoided a scene while proving the point.

This highlights broader dynamics in adult friendships, particularly when life stages diverge. Child-free folks often feel their time is undervalued, while parents might lean on kid-related excuses to mask poorer planning.

Psychologist Pauline Wallin explains that chronic lateness can strain relationships by implying a lack of respect for others’ time. “When you agree to be somewhere at a given time, you’re essentially entering into a contract,” she says. “But if one person is consistently late, it creates a breach of trust not just for the moment, but often for the entire relationship.”

Experts link chronic lateness to personality traits or habits, like optimism about task durations or difficulty with time estimation. Psychologists call this the planning fallacy, a cognitive bias where people assume best-case scenarios rather than realistic ones.

A survey found that 15 to 20 percent of the U.S. population is “consistently late,” often without realizing the ripple effects on others. In parenting contexts, while kids can cause delays, consistent tardiness usually ties more to preparation than unavoidable chaos – many parents manage punctuality for school, appointments, or work without issue.

Neutral ground? Open communication helps: Acknowledge parenting challenges while stressing mutual respect for schedules. Solutions could include building in buffers, texting updates if running behind, or choosing kid-friendly spots that ease logistics. Friendships thrive on compromise, perhaps alternating who travels or planning looser meetups.

Check out how the community responded:

Some people argue that parents must plan ahead and start preparing earlier to avoid chronic lateness.

ppmd − NTA, if she knows it's going to take 30 minutes extra, she leaves 30 minutes earlier. It's really not that hard.

HolyGonzo − Dad here. Being occasionally late is understandable.

I've literally had kids throwing up moments before we're supposed to get into the car, or picking up a coffee mug and pouring it on the rug, stuff like that.

Some things you just can't avoid. Being consistently late just means she isn't planning well.

It does NOT take 30 minutes to get a child into the car, so I'm guessing she isn't watching the clock and is blaming her lateness on her kid,

which will be really bad once the kid picks up on it and starts thinking there is something wrong with herself

because mommy keeps blaming her when talking to other people. NTA

ivanthemute − NTA. Father of two, both well past toddlers age here.

If you got kids and wrangling your goblins means a longer prep period, you start earlier. Kids are no excuse for poor time management.

Some parents say occasional lateness happens with kids, but consistent lateness is unacceptable and not an excuse.

Outrageously_Penguin − NTA. I think it’s fair to extend a little extra grace to parents who are traveling with young kids—

sometimes you’re walking out the door and your kid decides it’s a great time to take a giant s__t.

But this isn’t that, she’s just perpetually rude and late and using being a mom as an excuse—

both to be late and to be a condescending a__hole to you. She’s a crappy friend.

HKatzOnline − NTA - I am speaking as a parent of 4. SOMETIMES we ran late when we were wrangling FOUR you children (we had 4 under 4 years old).

That is because you can occasionally have a blowout at the last minute (when they are very young).

The worst is that your friend is consistently late and doesn't seem to recognize that the phone she uses to text you after she arrived

and you left could also be used to text you saying she was running late. That being said, being late should be the exception, not the rule.

RSkritt − Have kids. Rarely ever late and if I am it’s 10-15 minutes. With full notice given. This is your friend, not her kid. Better off without her. Nta.

Some people view “mom privileges” for chronic lateness as invalid and a sign of disrespecting others’ time.

[Reddit User] − NTA. I'm a mother of four. Guess what you can't use "mom privileges" for?

School. Doctors appointments. Dentist appointments. Parties. Flights. Guess what else you can't use "mom privileges" for? Being chronically late.

_catt − NTA And if I'm being honest you're friend doesn't sound much like a friend.

She obviously looks down on you from some pedestal because she has "mom privileges. " Those aren't real.

I bet she isn't late to doctors appointments or work . She is just a s__tty friend who is mad

because she had to get off her a__ to hang out with you instead of you catering to her. People like this make my skin crawl.

JohnRedcornMassage − NTA When someone is always late, they don’t respect your time or you in general.

Princess-Reader − A four year old isn’t a toddler & by that age it’s less hard to get them ready.

This tale reminds us that friendships evolve with life changes, and clear expectations keep things smooth. The Redditor stood up for their time after repeated letdowns, but the fallout shows how quickly misunderstandings flare.

Do you think setting that 30-minute limit was a solid move, or did it tip into unfair territory given the parenting angle? How would you handle a friend who repeatedly runs late while pulling the “kid card”? Drop your thoughts below, we’re all ears!

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 1/1 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/1 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/1 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/1 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/1 votes | 0%

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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