In the quiet confines of their shared apartment, an unexpected clash erupted over something as personal and private as a dildo left drying on the bathroom mirror. The tension between roommates, usually masked by routine and camaraderie, suddenly boiled over into a confrontation that questioned boundaries, respect, and the delicate dance of cohabitation.
Caught between asserting personal comfort and navigating social grace, one roommate struggled with the demand to politely request what seemed like a basic courtesy. The lingering presence of those intimate objects on display became more than a mere annoyance—it was a symbol of unspoken rules and the fragile balance of living together.

AITA for asking my roommates to remove their dildos from the bathroom mirror in a way that was not kind?







As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” In this scenario, the core issue revolves around the establishment and maintenance of boundaries within a shared living space, specifically concerning personal hygiene and private items intersecting with the common area.
The poster’s reaction was immediate and firm, driven by a feeling that the roommates violated an unstated, yet fundamental, expectation of shared space appropriateness—that intimate personal items should not be displayed or left to dry in a communal bathroom sink/mirror area. This reaction, while stemming from a valid desire for comfort and privacy, bypassed the standard social script of ‘asking kindly,’ which the roommates seized upon. The roommates’ focus on the tone rather than the substance of the request suggests a deflection tactic; by insisting on politeness, they avoid addressing the central boundary violation: using the shared space for the drying of sex toys.
The poster’s feeling that they shouldn’t have to ask at all is common when a perceived low-effort violation of shared living etiquette occurs. However, in roommate dynamics, even widely accepted norms require reinforcement. While the poster was not overtly aggressive, future interactions would benefit from clearer, proactive communication, perhaps stating, ‘Hey, I need the bathroom now, please remove your personal items,’ which combines necessary assertiveness with functional language. The roommates, conversely, need to recognize that certain items are inherently inappropriate for shared drying areas, regardless of how politely the request for removal is phrased.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.















The original poster expressed strong frustration over finding sex toys drying in a shared bathroom, leading to a direct confrontation where they demanded the items be removed immediately. The central conflict arises from the difference in expectations: the poster believes items like sex toys should never be left in a communal space, while the roommates insist that the poster should have communicated this request with more kindness.
Is the poster justified in making a direct demand for the immediate removal of personal items from a common area, or should they have prioritized polite communication, even if they felt the request itself was fundamentally reasonable?







