Ah, college life! It’s all about new experiences, friendships, and… roommate drama? One college freshman found herself in a sticky situation when her roommate asked if her long-distance boyfriend could stay in their shared dorm room for three nights. With exams looming and the need for personal space, our protagonist had to make a tough decision. But was she in the wrong? Let’s dive into the story and find out! ️
The Roommate and Her Boyfriend

Previous Visits

Sharing a Room

The New Request

Standing My Ground

The Air Mattress Solution?

Alternative Options

Her Response

Tears and Accusations

Her Offer

My Final Word

The Verdict: Was She Wrong?
So, our protagonist found herself in a tough spot, torn between her roommate’s emotional plea and her own need for personal space and study time during exams. She stood her ground and suggested alternatives, but her roommate wasn’t having it. With tears and accusations flying, was our protagonist really in the wrong for not wanting to share her dorm room with her roommate’s boyfriend for three nights? Let’s see what the internet thinks of this situation…
“NTA. Dorm rooms aren’t designed for overnight guests. Get a hotel!”

NTA. Dorm room comfort matters. 18-year-olds should have their own rooms!

NTA. Boyfriend should pay for hotel, not kick out roommate.

Roommate wants boyfriend to stay, but OP sets boundaries.

“NTA. If she kicks up a fuss, take it to your RA or your residency office.”

NTA- College rules, her problem. Stick to your rights!

Stand your ground! Your dorm, your rules. No hotel-hopping allowed.

NTA – Dorms aren’t hotels. Set your boundaries and stand firm!

Setting boundaries is crucial. Don’t let manipulation ruin your peace.

NTA, escalate to get a new room or roommate.

“NTA. Your dorm room, your rules. They can find alternatives.”

NTA! Roommate wants to kick you out for her boyfriend!

Roommate wants boyfriend to stay, but NTA says no!

Setting boundaries in your own space is justified

“NTA she is breaking campus rules for some mooch. Report them!”

Stand your ground! It’s your home, not a hotel!

Roommate needs to find an adult solution, not exploit your kindness.

You stood your ground! NTA for not letting her boyfriend stay.

NTA: Roommate needs to respect boundaries and find another place.

Stand your ground, it’s your home too!

Set boundaries: Get your own place or sleep elsewhere!

Stand your ground! Roommate drama can strain friendships.

NTA! Set boundaries and let her deal with it.

NTA – Stand your ground and prioritize your own comfort!

Stand your ground! It’s YOUR room!

NTA. No overnight guests in your dorm room. Period.

Setting boundaries with roommates during exam period

Stand your ground! ️ Don’t let her guilt trip you.

Roommate wants her boyfriend to stay, but I said no! NTA

Roommate drama! NTA, but roommate is being unreasonable.

“NTA, stand up for yourself! Talk to the RA about it. “

NTA: Dorm drama! Age gap and hotel bookings, who’s the a**hole?
