Couple Ends Long-Term Relationship Just Because Woman Loves Taking Long Shower

A woman dated her charming boyfriend for 18 months, with plans for him to move into her home seeming perfect after his lease ended. Everything shifted when he casually remarked that her cherished 30-40 minute steam shower routine would have to stop once they shared space, claiming she needed to stay more “present” for a man.

The small critique exploded into a list of demands: store away skincare items, reduce entryway shoes, cancel her composting, forbid unsupervised visits from her teenage brother and his friends, and quit volunteering at a men’s shelter. He justified it all by saying she would belong to him and must behave accordingly upon cohabitation. Stunned, she chose to end the relationship.

A woman ended her relationship after her boyfriend demanded she change personal habits and cut ties.

Couple Ends Long-Term Relationship Just Because Woman Loves Taking Long Shower
Not the actual photo.

'AITAH for ending a relationship over long showers?'

I don't think I'm the a__hole, but my aunt and mom got in my head over the holidays and now I am questioning myself.

Until early November I (28F) was in a long-term relationship with "Kevin" (30M).

We were together for about 18 months. He was planning to move in with me at the end of November when his lease was up.

I own my own place, whereas he had a roommate who was recently engaged. Seemed like good timing all round.

Kevin was generally a good guy. Funny, charming, easy going. I thought I was in love.

But a few weeks before he was supposed to move in, he made a weird off hand comment about my evening shower habits.

Now look, I know some people will find this crazy but it's not as crazy as it seems.

I have a glorious steam shower with a comfy bench. I take long a__ steams before bed.

Usually 15 minutes to steam, 5 to 10 minutes (with the water on and off) to shower and wash my hair, and another 5 or so for skin care.

I'm not hogging the only bathroom or the hot water. And I only do it after everything else is done for the day (work, chores, s__).

Anyway, the comment was that I would have to knock off things like that when I was living with him. Which, why?

He said I was wasting time and needed to be more "present" when I lived with "a man." Wtf? It's 30-40 minutes. I can't have 30-40 minutes to myself?

This lead to a longer argument about the various things about myself and life I would need to change before he would move in.

Like I was doing him a favor letting him live with me rent free. Many things themselves weren't terrible:

put my various skin care things away rather than leaving them on the shelf (fair), don't leave so many shoes in the mudroom

(they're on a rack but whatever), stop the composting service (he wants to do it).

But a few were non-starters: don't have my brother (17) and his friends over "unsupervised" (by him!) and don't volunteer at a local shelter that houses men.

It was wild. He had never shown any indication of being controlling before so I tried to talk to him about what he was thinking.

He just said that moving in meant that "I was his and needed to act like it" (paraphrasing).

I said, then we weren't moving in together as I am not anyone's (less articulate than that) and asked him to leave.

We had another conversation a day or so later, but neither of us budged so we mutually broke it off.

I was sad, but not devastated. Mostly completely confused and questioning my ability to see any red flags. There had to be some right??

I thought I made the right choice. My friends think I made the right choice. My baby brother also thinks I made the right choice (he may be influenced by...

But my mom and aunt think I made a huge mistake. It's been a solid two weeks of you're going to die alone!

You're selfish! You have to compromise in relationships! You can't expect him to put up with your single girl schedules and habits! He was such a catch!

I feel like my head is going to explode. I thought my mom would at least care that he was cutting off free brother sitting when they travel,

but no, she thinks my ex was right that my brother and his friends shouldn't be in the house alone with a single woman at their age

(I baby sat most of them when they were younger for Christ sakes!!).

Am I really unreasonable here? I'm driving myself nuts. We are not getting back together. But was I an a__hole?.

I'm having dinner with my dad in an hour I will ask! I promise!

What began as a minor gripe about shower time quickly exposed deeper issues around control, possession, and expectations in a relationship. The Redditor’s ex was laying out non-negotiable demands that targeted her independence, family ties, and personal time, all under the guise of “moving in together.”

From one perspective, some might argue relationships involve adjusting habits to make cohabitation smoother. Fair enough on surface-level stuff like shoe placement or skincare clutter. But the conversation shifted when he insisted on supervising her teenage brother’s visits and demanded she stop volunteering at a shelter.

These isolated her from family and community while framing her as property rather than a partner. His phrasing “you’re his and need to act like it” is a classic red flag for possessive, controlling dynamics.

This ties into broader patterns of controlling behavior in relationships, often starting subtly before escalating. Experts note that such tactics can include isolation from friends/family, monitoring activities, or dictating personal routines, which erode autonomy.

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According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), over 61 million women in the U.S. have experienced psychological aggression by an intimate partner in their lifetime, including behaviors aimed at exerting control. Controlling actions like jealousy over time spent with others or attempts to limit independence often precede or accompany other forms of abuse.

Clinical psychologist Andrea Bonior, writing for Psychology Today, describes how controlling partners may use emotional manipulation, pointing out that “some controlling partners are acting out of a sense of emotional fragility and heightened vulnerability.”

Yet, regardless of intent, the impact remains harmful, creating an imbalanced power dynamic where one person’s needs dominate. In this story, the ex’s sudden demands suggest insecurity masked as concern for the relationship, but they crossed into restricting her freedom and support network.

The good news? Spotting these patterns early allows for healthier choices. Neutral advice includes open communication about boundaries early on, but when demands feel one-sided or possessive, prioritizing self-respect is key. Therapy or trusted friends can help unpack doubts, especially when family voices add guilt. Ultimately, compromise should feel mutual, not like surrendering parts of yourself.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Some people emphasize that the OP is lucky the boyfriend revealed his controlling and abusive nature early.

Important_Zombie_223 − Aren't you lucky he showed his true colours before he moved in?

Party-Giraffe-6573 − NTA - abusive partners never start off showing their true colors right away.

Someone trying to keep you from all men (even family) and from having time alone is ultra controlling.

Be glad he didn't move in and that you cut things off before they could escalate more.

Imaginary_Chair_6958 − Be glad that he showed you who he was. Lucky escape. Your mom and aunt are wrong.

Some people strongly support the OP being NTA and praise choosing to be alone over staying with an abusive or controlling partner.

ThePythiaofApollo − OP, you’re going to die alone with… your steam shower in your own house with social life and good skin?

Sign up literally every woman in here complaining about her s__tty relationship for that hell!!! NTA

ActualMassExtinction − For your mom and aunt: “I’d rather die alone than as property.”

bonniemick − I'd rather die alone than live with an AH. NTA. Kevin let his mask slip.

Troopersuperpooper − Yes! Die alone! It’s the best thing you can do for yourself. You know why? You will live much longer!

Others point out the mom’s and aunt’s internalized misogyny.

Equivalent_Lemon_319 − Your mom and aunt f__king suck. This is what you call internalized misogyny. NTA

acnh1492 − NTA and if internalized misogyny was a person, it would be your mom and aunt. Don’t let them mess with your head. You did the right thing.

Some people clarify that the issue isn’t the long showers themselves but how they exposed deeper controlling problems in the relationship.

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phdoofus − You're clearly asking the wrong question since you didn't break up because of the long showers.

The long showers simply exposed problems that you either ignore or weren't aware of.

In the end, this Redditor chose her independence, peace, and steam showers over a relationship that demanded she shrink herself. Was ending things the right call before cohabitation turned controlling, or could more compromise have worked? How would you handle family piling on with “you’ll die alone” guilt trips? Drop your thoughts below!

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