The original poster (OP) describes an unusual situation involving their best friend and a broken toilet seat, stemming from the friend’s extreme fear of germs. The OP had a yeast infection some time ago after taking antibiotics, which now appears to be the source of the friend’s exaggerated anxiety.
The friend’s boyfriend recently gave her an STD, which he falsely attributed to a toilet seat, leading the friend to believe that surfaces, including the OP’s toilet, are high-risk contamination zones. After the friend broke the OP’s expensive toilet seat by squatting on it due to germ fear, the OP demanded payment and restricted bathroom use, leading to an argument where the friend accused the OP of being dramatic and overstepping boundaries based on a past infection. The OP is now questioning if their reaction was appropriate.

AITA for telling my best friend she’s not allowed to use my bathroom unless she poops like a normal person?












As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a complex breakdown in boundaries, where the friend’s anxiety has externalized into property destruction, and the OP’s reaction attempts to set a boundary around future physical access.
The friend’s motivation appears rooted in acute health anxiety, likely exacerbated by her boyfriend’s misinformation regarding the STD transmission. This anxiety led to a maladaptive coping mechanism—squatting on the seat—which resulted in property damage. The OP’s immediate reaction, focusing on the ‘poor destroyed toilet seat’ over the friend’s minor injury, suggests a momentary prioritization of material value over relational concern, fueling the friend’s perception of the OP as uncaring or overly controlling (‘germ gatekeeper’). While the OP is entirely justified in demanding compensation for the destroyed item, dictating the friend’s ‘shitting position’ introduces an unnecessarily controlling element into the friendship dynamic.
The OP’s demand for payment for the broken seat is appropriate, as the damage was caused by the friend’s direct, albeit fear-driven, actions. However, the restriction on how the friend may use the bathroom moving forward is an overreach that crosses into policing personal behavior, regardless of the reasoning. A constructive approach would be to firmly state that the friend must replace the specific toilet seat, while engaging in compassionate dialogue about the underlying germ fears rather than issuing positional mandates.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.















The central conflict lies between the OP’s reasonable desire to protect their property from intentional misuse and the friend’s strong, irrational health anxiety that manifested in destructive behavior. While the friend is dealing with misplaced fears stemming from misinformation, the OP reacted primarily to the financial damage and the bizarre circumstances of the breakage, leading to accusations about policing personal habits.
The debate centers on who holds more responsibility: the friend for causing property damage through an absurd act or the OP for prioritizing the physical object over the friend’s stated distress. Should the OP focus solely on replacing the physical property, or does the friend’s behavior warrant the imposed usage restrictions?







