KevinLA wrote:
1) Was it too much to ask of a friend?
2) Should I have felt I was being taken advantage of?
3) Was it wrong to task for that amount of money?
4) Was I being selfish by not doing it as a favor?
1) Too much for him to ask of a friend that they might give a ride? No, it's perfectly fine for him to ask you if you'll do that...once. He did cross over a line a bit perhaps by persisting but we don't the full story from his side - he may have had no other options and was desperate (part of me believes this is the case since he couldn't find someone else willing to driving that wouldn't want $40 for it.
2) This is a tough call. Yes, it was a big thing for him to ask you to do, but friends do favours for each other all the time. The one respect in which you may have been taken advantage of is that he may have figured if he pestered you hard enough you'd eventually cave and say yes.
3) No. You stated the price that you were willing to do it for. In fact, what you did by naming such a high price is not uncommon - I know people that have done it. If a company is given the opportunity to bid on a job that they don't actually really want to do, they'll name an exorbitantly high price that they figure has no chance of being the lowest bid. Then, it's a win-win for them: either they don't get stuck with a job they don't want, or they make enough money on the job that it becomes worth the hassle.
It's a free market - you have every right to name whatever price you like. The price may seem high at first, but factor in gas, wear and tear on the car, and your time, and it adds up.
4) No - unless he'd done something similar for you (which since he was 14, I doubt). If he had given you a ride somewhere another time for free, and then you wanted to charge him $40 this time, that would be selfish. Or even if he'd done a bunch of other unrelated favours for you without asking anything in return. It is not selfish to ask to be compensated for your effort - it only becomes selfish if you expect a free ride when you're looking for a favour.