The original poster (OP) lives in a three-bedroom apartment with two friends, all of whom are college-aged. The OP’s girlfriend and the roommate’s girlfriend are both frequent visitors. The roommate’s girlfriend has publicly stated she is asexual and seems to disapprove of people who engage in sexual activity.
The OP and his girlfriend maintain quiet, respectful behavior regarding their intimacy. However, the roommate’s girlfriend recently communicated, via the roommate’s phone, that the OP having sex in his own room, behind closed doors, and with minimal noise, makes her very uncomfortable, even though she admitted she had not heard them and had avoided the apartment for a week due to this assumption. The OP questioned this interference in his private life, leading to a brief disagreement over boundaries.

My roommate’s asexual girlfriend doesn’t want me having sex in my own apartment. AITA?












As researcher and author Dr. Henry Cloud often stresses regarding interpersonal limits, “Boundaries are not about controlling other people; they are about knowing what is acceptable for yourself and communicating that clearly.”
This situation presents a clear clash between the OP’s right to autonomy within his leased dwelling and the roommate’s girlfriend’s attempt to impose behavioral restrictions based on her personal sensibilities. The OP is correct in identifying this as a boundary violation; his sexual activity, when conducted quietly and behind closed doors in his private room, is legally and ethically his own business. The roommate’s girlfriend, as a guest who does not pay rent, holds significantly less standing to dictate the tenant’s lifestyle choices. Her motivation appears rooted in a discomfort that she is attempting to project outward as a universal standard, which is an overreach, especially when she admits she neither hears nor sees the activity in question.
The OP’s response, while perhaps too direct initially by stating it was ‘none of her business,’ successfully defended the core principle of privacy. Moving forward, the constructive recommendation is for the OP to maintain his current behavior, as it violates no rules of tenancy or common courtesy (due to quietness). If the roommate allows his girlfriend to continue making unfounded demands, the OP needs to address the issue directly with his leaseholder (the roommate) about ensuring all guests respect the tenants’ privacy.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.











The central conflict revolves around the OP asserting his right to privacy and personal choices within his own rented space against the expressed discomfort of a non-paying guest who feels entitled to influence his private behavior based on her personal asexuality and moral stance.
The core question is whether the OP is wrong (AITA) for refusing to change private, quiet, and lawful behavior in his own home to accommodate the subjective feelings of a visitor, or if friendship norms require some level of consideration for a housemate’s girlfriend’s strongly stated discomfort, even if she is not a tenant.







