The user, a 29-year-old man (OP), offered his spare room to a 28-year-old female friend of several years who was facing financial hardship. They planned this living arrangement over a month, with the move-in date set for the second week of February.
During discussions about their future living situation, the friend casually stated that she would not be sleeping with the OP, implying she assumed he had an ulterior sexual motive. This surprised the OP, who stated he did not want a romantic relationship. Her response that this was a standard boundary for any roommate made the OP feel the comment was condescending, leading him to reconsider the arrangement and seek time to withdraw the offer. The core dilemma is whether the OP is wrong (AITAH) for feeling uneasy and wanting to cancel the sublet based on this interaction.

AITAH for reneging on letting someone live with me because they said they won’t sleep with me?









According to Dr. Sloane Perry, a specialist in interpersonal dynamics, “Unsolicited assumptions about sexual intent in non-romantic contexts often reveal more about the speaker’s internal anxieties regarding trust and vulnerability than the actual behavior of the person they are addressing.”
The OP’s reaction is understandable because the friend’s comment immediately shifted the foundation of their agreement from one of platonic assistance to one laced with suspicion. For the OP, who explicitly does not desire a romantic relationship, this statement negated the trust he thought existed, replacing it with a need for defensive boundary enforcement from her side. While the friend likely felt she was establishing a necessary safety boundary, her delivery implied that the OP’s default setting, due to his gender, was one of hidden sexual pursuit.
In situations involving shared living spaces, clear communication is paramount. However, the way boundaries are introduced matters. The OP acted reasonably by pausing the arrangement to reassess, as the foundation of comfort was compromised. A constructive path forward would involve the OP calmly explaining that the comment implied a lack of respect for his platonic character, allowing both parties to either reaffirm trust under clear, mutual rules or to amicably dissolve the housing plan before moving in.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.




























The OP is currently caught between maintaining a potentially awkward or misunderstood living arrangement with a friend and the need to assert his boundaries and intentions clearly. The conflict stems from the friend projecting an assumption onto the OP’s platonic offer of help, which caused the OP to feel his motives were unfairly questioned and judged.
The reader must consider whether the friend’s preemptive statement was a necessary boundary setting for safety or an unwarranted insult to the OP’s character. The central question remains: Was the OP justified in feeling insulted and reconsidering the housing offer because of the friend’s specific, unsolicited remark about sex?







