A mother’s quiet frustration grows with each day as the simple act of using the bathroom turns into a battlefield of respect and responsibility. In a home where boundaries blur and excuses echo, she faces the exhausting reality of parenting alone during the long hours her husband works nights, struggling to enforce basic courtesy from her teenage sons.
Caught between patience and the breaking point, she contemplates installing a child lock on the toilet seat—not just as a practical solution, but as a desperate plea for accountability and peace in her shared space. This small act symbolizes her fight for respect in a home where her needs have been repeatedly overlooked.

WIBTA if I install locks on the toilet seat?











As renowned family therapist and boundary expert Dr. Henry Cloud explains, “Boundaries are about what is acceptable or unacceptable for you. It is about your right to self-protection.” In this scenario, the OP is attempting to establish a boundary regarding shared space cleanliness and respect, which is being actively challenged by her 15-year-old son.
The core issue here extends beyond the toilet seat; it involves respect, adherence to household rules, and the perception of equitable parental labor. The son’s response, “why should we have to close the lid,” demonstrates a failure to recognize shared responsibility and a direct challenge to the mother’s authority, especially when combined with disrespectful language. The OP is experiencing emotional fatigue from feeling like the sole active parent during the husband’s work hours, escalating her reaction to the physical annoyance of the toilet seat.
The OP’s action to install a lock, while extreme, is an understandable manifestation of extreme frustration and a perceived breakdown in communication. However, a constructive recommendation would involve re-establishing clear, consequence-based communication rather than resorting to physical barriers that treat the son like a small child. The grounding is appropriate for the language used, but the lock should be presented as a temporary, visible demonstration of the boundary that will be removed once consistent adherence to closing the lid (or using an alternative bathroom) is established and proven over time.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.



























The original poster (OP) reached a breaking point due to the repeated disrespect and the physical inconvenience caused by the toilet seat being left up by her teenage son. Her actions, including grounding him and threatening to install a child lock, stem from feeling unsupported in her parenting role, especially given her husband’s night shift schedule.
Is the OP justified in installing a child safety lock on the toilet seat as a measure to enforce basic cleanliness and respect, or is this action an overly restrictive and disproportionate reaction to a common household disagreement regarding toilet seat etiquette?







