She Asked Her Roommate To Wait Before Showering. It Turned Into A Fight About “Control.”

Living with roommates always comes down to one thing. The small stuff.

Not the dramatic blowups. Not unpaid rent. The everyday friction. The kitchen sponge. The trash bag. The bathroom schedule.

For one 21-year-old student, it was the shower.

She lives in a three-bedroom flat her parents own. After three happy years with former roommates who became close friends, she found two new ones, Mary and Haley. Things started off fine. She clicked quickly with Haley. Mary was quieter, more reserved.

There were just a few house rules. Nothing wild. No loud noise after 11 p.m. on weekdays. Let the others know if you are not sleeping at home. And one specific bathroom rule.

If someone is showering, you wait until they are done before starting yours.

It sounds strict, until you hear why.

She Asked Her Roommate to Wait Before Showering. It Turned Into a Fight About “Control.”
Not the actual photo

Here’s how it unfolded.

'AITA for asking my roommates to wait before they shower?'

I (21f) moved away from my family 3 years ago to study and since then I've been living in a flat that my parents own.

The flat has 3 bedrooms so I decided to get roommates so that it wasn't as expensive, and also to have some company which I find better than living alone.

I've had the same roommates for the past 3 years and we very quickly became best friends but they both left to go study abroad.

I looked for new roommates and found these two girls that I'll call Mary and Haley.

They both moved in about a month ago. We got to know each other and I became good friends with Haley, but not as much with Mary because she's more...

I have 3 rules for the flat: no loud noises after 11pm on weekdays because we all have school or work; if one of us is not sleeping at home...

That's because the plumbing in the flat is old and doesn't work super well so when two people shower at the same time the person that was showering first gets...

And then obviously, keep the place clean, but that doesn't really have to be said. I've had these rules with my previous roommates and everything went well.

Mary doesn't really respect the shower rule. Normally, what we do is we scream "shower" before getting in, and then we scream "over" when we're done.

But there were a few times when Mary went into the shower before the other person was done.

I completely understand that she wasn't really used to the rule as much as I was so it probably wasn't intentional,

and it was really hot so taking a cold shower wasn't a problem, so I just casually reminded her but I didn't really say anything.

Yesterday, I was coming home from work a bit late and it was raining really hard so when I got home I went straight to the shower.

I really wanted a nice hot shower because I was really cold and tired, but not even 2 minutes after I got in the shower the water turned cold.

I had shampoo in my hair so it wasn't ideal. I got out to see why it was cold and I heard another shower running, it was Mary.

I had to wait until she was done to go back in the shower and finally have hot water.

Today I sort of confronted her about it and told her that it was kind of annoying and that it would really be better if she followed the rule.

She told me that I was controlling and was trying to monitor when they showered and everything they did.

I asked Haley if she felt the same way and she said no, and I also don't feel like I try to control anything, or like the rules that I...

Mary left right after the argument and hasn't been responding to our texts. I really want to fix it but I'm also not sure if I'm in the wrong or...

Sorry if this is not clear, English isn't my first language and the characters are limited so if you need clarification I'll answer in the comments.

EDIT/UPDATE: Mary came home a while ago and we sat down to talk about the whole thing. She really apologized and listened and it was honestly great.

She told me many things, the first one being that she was in a very bad mood yesterday and this morning for personal reasons and she apologized for that.

She said that she would try to really be a better roommate from now on. We also talked about the rules and what we thought was appropriate (with Haley) and...

And lastly she told me that she was feeling a bit excluded because Haley and I get along really well while she's less social and has been struggling a bit...

so we've really talked and tried to get to know each other. In other words, all's well that ends well, thankfully,

and I think I might've even gotten a new friend because of this whole thing. I'd also like to thank everyone who was nice and gave constructive advice!

The Rule That Made Sense

The flat has old plumbing. When two showers run at the same time, the person who started first suddenly gets freezing water.

It is not dramatic. It is just unpleasant.

So over the years, she and her old roommates created a simple system. Before stepping in, you yell “shower.” When you finish, you yell “over.” It worked. No cold surprises. No tension.

Mary struggled with that rule from the start.

A few times, she turned on the shower while someone else was still inside. It was summer, so the cold water was tolerable. The homeowner casually reminded her. No big confrontation.

Then came the rainy night.

She got home soaked, cold, exhausted from work. All she wanted was a long, hot shower.

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Two minutes in, shampoo in her hair, the water turned ice cold.

She stepped out, confused, and heard the other shower running.

Mary.

She waited until Mary finished, then went back in to rinse out her hair. Not ideal.

The next day, she brought it up. Calmly. Said it was frustrating. Asked her to please follow the system.

Mary did not take it well.

“You’re Controlling”

Mary accused her of being controlling. Of monitoring when they shower. Of trying to manage everything they do.

That hit harder than the cold water.

From her perspective, this was not about authority. It was about courtesy. No one was told when they could shower. They just had to wait their turn so the plumbing would not punish whoever got in first.

She checked with Haley privately. Haley did not think the rule was unreasonable.

But Mary left after the argument and stopped responding to messages.

Now the student found herself questioning something that had always seemed logical. Was she micromanaging? Was it unfair because technically her parents own the flat?

The power dynamic complicated it. Even if she did not feel like a landlord, Mary might.

What This Was Really About

Roommate conflict is rarely about the surface issue.

Yes, it was about hot water. But it was also about belonging.

When someone moves into an established space with preexisting systems, it can feel like entering someone else’s world. The rules may be practical, but they can also feel imposed.

Mary may not have minded cold water. She may not have fully understood how annoying it feels to be mid-shampoo when the temperature drops. Or she may have simply felt excluded, especially seeing Haley and the homeowner bond quickly.

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When people feel peripheral, small rules can start to feel bigger.

Still, the rule itself was not arbitrary. It solved a real problem. Many commenters pointed out that shared living requires compromise. Waiting five minutes so someone else does not freeze mid-shower is basic courtesy.

Some suggested petty revenge. Turn your shower back on so she gets cold water instead. Others recommended a house meeting and revisiting rules as a group so everyone feels ownership.

One person with plumbing experience suggested upgrading the valves altogether.

The truth is, all shared spaces require systems. The key is whether those systems are collaborative or imposed.

The Conversation That Changed Everything

Thankfully, it did not stay tense.

Mary came home later and asked to talk. She apologized. She admitted she had been in a bad mood for personal reasons. She acknowledged she had not handled it well.

They sat down, all three of them, and reviewed the house rules together. Adjusted the system. Made it more mutual.

Then something more vulnerable surfaced.

Mary admitted she had been feeling excluded. Haley and the homeowner were close. She felt like the odd one out.

The shower argument was just the spillover.

With that on the table, things shifted. They talked more. They listened. It stopped being about control and started being about connection.

Here’s the input from the Reddit crowd:

Most agreed the rule itself was reasonable. Some joked that the easiest way to teach Mary would be to flip the cold water back on her once or twice.

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Quick-Possession-245 − Every time she is in the shower, turn on the other one so she gets cold water. NTA

Euphoric_Travel2541 − NTA, because there is a real problem when two showers are going at the same time, you’ve explained it, and have a system in place to deal with...

It may be that she doesn’t mind because she’s never experienced being the first shower and losing hot water when a second shower is turned on.

I can only suggest that you provide her with that experience once or twice.

Then have a house meeting and go over ground rules together and see if all agree on then, want to add any, remove any and vote.

Majority rules. That’s better than saying you set the rules because your parents own the place. It will feel like she gets an equal say.

Which is fair.

GraveArchitectur3 − NTA Why don't you just turn off the shower and turn it on again? Then you get the hot water and she gets the cold.

Others pointed out that discussing and voting on house rules together might prevent resentment.

kymrIII − How come you didn’t turn your shower off and then back on again?

catskilkid − You established 3 simple rules. She knew the rules when she agreed to rent. Now she says the rules are controlling.

That is an issue you bring up before agreeing to live BY THOSE RULES.

She either needs to apologize and start living by the VERY SIMPLE (and rational shower rule) or you need to look for a new roommate. NTA

Careless-Hall-743 − NTA- you should start getting in the shower after her so she understands where your coming from lol

lmchatterbox − NTA. You aren’t trying to control when she showers. You just want a heads up so you don’t have to take a cold one.

A few reminded everyone that old plumbing is the real villain here.

plm56 − NTA Mary doesn't understand common courtesy. The next time she gets in the shower, wait a minute or two, then hop in yourself.

swooshhh − NTA. Question, if you turn your shower off wait a few then turn it back on will you then get that hot water back and the other person...

plumb_master − Nah, but this could all be avoided if you get the shower valves replaced with pressure balancing units.

Talk to your landlord about it because as a subletter I'd think your system is ridiculous.

Sometimes a freezing shower is just a freezing shower.

And sometimes it is a symptom of someone feeling left out.

Shared living is a constant negotiation. Not about power, but about empathy.

In the end, this was never about who controls the bathroom. It was about making sure everyone feels heard.

So tell us. Was the rule practical, or too rigid? And how would you handle the next cold-water surprise?

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