In the quiet confines of their shared apartment, a silent war brews between two women whose lives have become painfully entangled. One seeks peace through ancient rituals and a digital detox, chasing tranquility in a world she believes is too connected, while the other fights to maintain her livelihood, tethered to the relentless pulse of the internet. Their clashing needs ignite a storm of frustration and misunderstanding, turning a once simple coexistence into a battlefield of unseen wounds and unmet needs.
Amidst sage smoke and unplugged routers, the deeper struggle unfolds—a desperate bid for control, respect, and a space to breathe. It’s not just about a Wi-Fi connection; it’s about the fragile balance between personal beliefs and shared realities, and the emotional toll when boundaries are crossed. In this domestic conflict, both women are prisoners of their own truths, yearning for harmony but caught in a web of silent resentment and unspoken pain.

AITA for moving the wifi router into my room after my roommate kept unplugging it to “detox from screens”?












Dr. Harriet Lerner, a renowned psychologist specializing in boundaries and conflict, emphasizes that healthy relationships require mutual respect for individual needs and clear communication regarding shared resources. When one party’s actions directly impede another’s ability to fulfill basic responsibilities, such as earning a living, the situation escalates beyond a simple lifestyle difference into a critical boundary violation.
The roommate’s behavior—unplugging necessary equipment based on ‘crystal energy logic’—demonstrates an inability or unwillingness to negotiate practical realities. Her subsequent reaction to the OP securing the router, claiming she feels ‘trapped’ because the energy remains, highlights an externalization of control, framing her personal choice as a requirement for the entire household. The OP’s action of locking the router was a reactive measure taken after repeated, unsuccessful communication attempts, effectively creating a necessary physical boundary where social boundaries failed. However, moving the router without a final, firm discussion about scheduling (e.g., ‘The router stays in my room from 9 AM to 5 PM for work, otherwise it is accessible’) escalated the conflict into a power struggle, leading to the current impasse and social fallout.
While the OP’s need for internet access is valid and urgent, locking the router was an extreme, unilateral step that triggered the roommate’s defense mechanisms and accusations of toxicity. A more constructive approach would have been to clearly document the professional necessity, propose a structured schedule for internet use that accommodated both needs (even if the roommate refused the proposed compromise item), and then, as a final step before sequestration, clearly state the consequence of further disconnection (e.g., ‘If you unplug this again during my workday, I will secure it until my work hours are over, as my job depends on it’).
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.




Is there anyway you can contact the landlord/property manager to see if there is away out of the lease do to hostile roommate?





The original poster (OP) acted out of necessity to protect her employment when her roommate repeatedly disabled the shared internet access based on non-scientific beliefs. This action resulted in a significant breakdown in communication, with the roommate accusing the OP of controlling behavior and spreading negative narratives to mutual acquaintances.
Given the conflicting needs—the OP’s professional requirements versus the roommate’s lifestyle choices—is the OP justified in prioritizing her essential need for work connectivity over the roommate’s desire for a completely unplugged environment, even if it meant taking unilateral control of the shared resource?







