Frustration boiled over in a moment that felt both unfair and exhausting. After spending a painstaking hour hand washing dishes that weren’t even hers, due to a broken dishwasher ignored by her roommates, she found herself at the mercy of ungrateful demands. The kindness of her uncle, who generously gifted her with quality kitchenware, stood in stark contrast to the thoughtless attitude of those she lived with.
In a shared space meant to be a home, boundaries blurred and respect was tested. What started as a simple act of generosity became a source of tension, revealing the raw emotional toll of feeling taken advantage of by those closest. This story is a powerful reminder of how kindness can sometimes be met with entitlement, and how resilience is born from navigating such moments.

My roommate thinks she deserves half my things because I’m moving out









































According to Dr. Harriet Lerner, author of ‘Why Won’t You Change?’, boundary violations often escalate when one party tests the limits of another’s tolerance. In this scenario, the roommate’s initial probing about the kitchenware quickly escalated into entitlement and aggressive demands, especially after the poster stated their intention to leave.
The roommate displayed classic entitlement behavior, attempting to reframe the poster’s legally and personally owned property as communal or as something owed to the remaining occupants as ‘compensation’ for the inconvenience of a roommate leaving. This behavior is a severe boundary violation, compounded by the roommate’s attempt to invoke guilt (‘you decided to move out and make it difficult’) and later, threats of police involvement over personal gifts. The poster’s motivations were logical: protecting their assets and responding to escalating disrespect. While yelling is generally discouraged, the poster’s final, firm reaction—especially when their friend was attacked—was a necessary assertion of self-respect and protection of their social circle.
The poster’s actions in boxing items early and escalating their response when their friend was insulted were appropriate defensive measures against predatory entitlement. A constructive recommendation for future situations is to communicate major asset removals in writing (e.g., a brief email) to the remaining parties well in advance, providing evidence of ownership (like the itemized list from the uncle) to preemptively shut down baseless claims.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.




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They will slowly steal it and more, Just went through this.

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The individual in this situation faced significant conflict due to their roommate’s unreasonable demands regarding property that was explicitly a personal gift. The core issue involved the roommate attempting to claim ownership or force a division of high-value kitchenware given solely to the poster by their uncle, framing this demand as compensation for the poster’s departure.
Given the clear ownership of the gifted items and the escalating disrespectful behavior of the roommate, was the poster justified in being firm and setting immediate boundaries, or should they have prioritized maintaining superficial peace by conceding a portion of their personal property to avoid conflict until the move-out date?







