AITA for refusing to drive an hour and a half to pick up my daughter’s sick friend from the amusement park?
A group of teens hit an amusement park on a school holiday, chauffeured by one early-riser dad at 8 a.m. and slated for pickup by another parent—our poster—whenever the girls called it a day. The plan was simple: one drop-off, one return trip, all together, no individual shuttles. But when 14-year-old Andy suddenly fell ill with explosive diarrhea at 2 p.m., the blueprint shattered.
What makes the story more complicated, Andy’s mom was locked into an “unreschedulable” appointment until 6 p.m. and begged the poster to make a solo 3-hour round trip, claiming the original offer covered emergency extractions. The knot tightens as the other girls refused to leave early—having saved for months—while Andy’s public accident became school gossip, landing her in a two-day social blackout. Now Andy’s mom blames the poster for the humiliation, but every other parent agrees: sick kid, parent problem.


The kids planned a group trip on a school holiday; one dad drove them at 8 a.m., the poster agreed to retrieve them all later.


At 2 p.m. Andy fell ill; the poster offered one trip for everyone, but the others wanted to stay until close.


No other parent could come; Andy’s mom begged the poster, citing her own 6 p.m. appointment.


The poster declined, unwilling to waste hours on multiple trips or force the group to leave early.




A single amusement-park vomit (or worse) exposed the fragile scaffolding of parental favors, where “I’ll pick up the girls” morphs into “be my on-call ambulance” the moment one kid’s stomach revolts. The original agreement was airtight: one dad sacrifices sleep for the 8 a.m. drop-off, the poster handles the single evening return—equal effort, shared burden, no extras. Andy’s 2 p.m. emergency flipped the script, but only for her mother, who treated the poster’s flexible schedule like a Uber Black subscription.
Counter-arguments about “village parenting” crumble under logistics: a 3-hour detour, potential biohazard in the minivan, and an hour of solo babysitting a non-relative until Mom’s mystery appointment ended. Socially, this mirrors a epidemic of entitlement where parents offload last-minute crises to whoever sounds nicest on the phone, eroding reciprocity and turning favors into obligations.
Psychologist Dr. Laura Markham stresses, “Children learn responsibility when parents model it—picking up a sick child is non-negotiable parental duty, not a group project”. Andy’s mom skipped that duty, then weaponized her daughter’s public humiliation to guilt-trip the one adult who enforced boundaries. The poster’s refusal wasn’t callous—it was the only move that preserved fairness for the other teens who’d saved for months and protected the poster’s own time. In the end, the real AH is the parent who chose highlights over her kid’s dignity.
Here’s the comments of Reddit users:
The vast majority backed the poster, insisting sick-kid pickup is strictly the parent’s job—no exceptions for roller-coaster diarrhea.






A couple commenters floated a swap idea but still ruled the poster blameless.

Two users delivered snarky truth-bombs about the mysterious “unreschedulable” appointment.

![[Reddit User] − Sick child always trumps "appointment that can't be rescheduled" What the hell was Andy's mom thinking? You're NTA. ..but Andy's mom. ..AH](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/10/wp-editor-1761898270206-2.webp)
Some other comments from readers.













The group outing unraveled when one teen’s stomach staged a revolt, yet the poster’s refusal to play solo chauffeur held firm against entitled demands. Andy’s mom prioritized her schedule, then scapegoated the only parent who drew a line. Have you ever been guilt-tripped into emergency parenting for someone else’s kid? When does “helping the group” cross into being taken for granted?
