In a cramped student apartment, two worlds collide—one rooted in ignorance, the other in silent frustration. The new roommate, eager yet oblivious, crosses the line from curiosity to insensitivity, her questions and comments laced with stereotypes that sting deeper than she realizes. For the ballet dancer sharing the space, this is more than annoyance; it’s a daily reminder of being seen not as a person, but as a caricature.
Caught between tolerance and the urge to push back, she wrestles with the weight of microaggressions that chip away at her peace. The relentless requests to conform to a narrow, exoticized idea of Blackness ignite a quiet fury, challenging her to stand firm in her identity amidst the uncomfortable gaze of ignorance.

AITA for telling my roommate she has no ass?








A Black student is living with a roommate who consistently relies on racial stereotypes and microaggressions. The constant questions and assumptions about her race create a growing sense of frustration and isolation within their shared living space.
Tensions peak during the lockdown when the roommate’s demands for a dance lesson cross a final boundary. A sharp retort leads to a heated confrontation and a silent treatment that leaves the student questioning her reaction.
Derald Wing Sue, a professor of counseling psychology and author of ‘Microaggressions in Everyday Life,’ defines microaggressions as everyday slights that communicate negative messages to marginalized groups. In this case, the roommate’s behavior—asking about ‘black things’ and demanding twerking lessons—represents a series of microaggressions that place an unfair emotional burden on the narrator. These actions reduce the narrator to a stereotype rather than acknowledging her individual identity as a ballet dancer.
The roommate’s reaction to the narrator’s insult reveals a lack of awareness regarding the cumulative impact of her own intrusive behavior. While the retort about the roommate’s physical appearance was harsh, it was a reactive response to a long-standing pattern of boundary-crossing and racial fetishization. The roommate’s emotional outburst effectively shifts the focus from her problematic behavior to her own hurt feelings, which is a common dynamic that forces the victim to manage the perpetrator’s emotions.
It is recommended that the narrator establish firm, explicit boundaries regarding racial topics and personal space during a calm moment. While the specific insult used was not a constructive communication tool, the narrator’s desire to end the harassment was entirely justified. In the future, using assertive statements to explain why specific stereotypes are offensive may be more effective, though the roommate must ultimately take responsibility for educating herself.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.












You don’t have to be nice to this person if you don’t want to and it’s absolutely NOT your job to educate her.



The narrator finds herself exhausted by the constant emotional labor of navigating her roommate’s ignorance and the repeated reduction of her identity to racial stereotypes. She faces a difficult conflict between her right to personal boundaries and the social expectation to remain polite to someone who consistently disrespects her.
Was the narrator’s sharp comment a necessary and justified defense against persistent racial harassment, or was it an unnecessarily cruel personal attack? The debate rests on whether an individual is obligated to maintain kindness when their own boundaries and identity are being repeatedly ignored.







