After a decade intertwined in love and shared dreams, two lives diverged, leaving behind a home built on equal parts trust and investment. Yet, as one partner seeks refuge in familiar walls for fleeting moments, the echoes of their past ignite a storm of emotional turmoil, revealing the fragile boundaries between memory and moving on.
In the quiet spaces of that three-bedroom house, the clash is not just about rooms or rent, but the raw, unhealed wounds of separation. One yearns for practical solace; the other, for peace of mind. Their story is a poignant dance of possession and pain, where the walls hold more than just their belongings—they hold their unresolved hearts.

AITA for wanting to temporarily live in a house I co-own with my ex









As noted by relationship expert Dr. John Gottman, post-separation dynamics often involve navigating residual emotional attachments and establishing clear psychological distance. In this scenario, while the OP (Original Poster) operates on a rational, legalistic plane regarding property rights, the ex-partner is functioning within the realm of emotional recovery and boundary setting.
The core conflict here is a clash between property ownership rights and emotional boundaries. Legally, the OP has a claim to the space they co-own. However, cohabitation with an ex, even temporarily, often reactivates the relational history, which can be destabilizing for the person who needs firm separation to move on. The ex’s concerns about ‘mental health’ and presenting a ‘red flag’ to a new partner are legitimate boundary assertions related to preserving the space needed for a new, independent life phase.
The OP’s action was not entirely inappropriate from a strictly financial perspective, but it failed to adequately prioritize the emotional requirements of the other principal party in the shared asset. A more constructive approach for the future would be to prioritize a definitive exit strategy for the shared asset (selling) and, in the interim, use short-term lodging solutions for required visits rather than imposing temporary cohabitation that forces the ex to constantly renegotiate emotional space.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

okay your own half the house so you have the right to live there
you need to sell this house now or buy him out
get a lawyer and see you options now
this is keeping you two connected
and your dating now so not being funny time to cut the strings that connect you two









Second edit: I see a lot of people replying that – oh but as a landlord he has no right to stay there. OR The money should go to the ex in that case. OP has already explained both these points.


![[deleted] ESH. This is exactly why when people split up...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/f7b11295174e5b8d7a34fd1b31f78ea4.png)


![[deleted] ESH / NAH depending](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/87022402ad249863cfcb226b7f433ad3.png)
> We got a tenant whose monthly rent is applied to my half of the mortgage, and I’m paying about 1/3 of my 1/2 of the mortgage still myself, not living there. So you/tenant are covering half.






The individual is focused on their financial and property rights, viewing the temporary stay as a practical necessity to save on lodging costs for specific events. This objective view clashes directly with the ex-partner’s strong emotional boundary regarding cohabitation after the breakup.
Given that this is shared property, is the original owner’s right to temporary, limited occupancy superseded by the emotional needs and comfort of the current resident, or should financial pragmatism dictate the short-term living arrangements?







