AITA for allowing my bf to cook at my apartment?
A 22-year-old woman was hit with excruciating pain from a ruptured ovarian cyst that twisted her ovary. Barely able to move and unable to keep food down, she texted her roommate to warn her that her boyfriend would be coming over and briefly using the kitchen to make her something simple to eat.
He heated up canned tomato soup and made a grilled cheese, then cleaned everything. Still, the roommate came out looking annoyed, shot him a dirty glance, and later texted complaints about having to put her hijab back on just to grab something from her own kitchen — even after learning about the ER visit and emergency surgery. Now the roommate is calling her an inconsiderate bitch, and she’s second-guessing herself.

‘AITA for allowing my bf to cook at my apartment?’
The roommate’s religious practice has always shaped how guests are handled:


Then a serious medical crisis hit suddenly:



The boyfriend kept it quick and tidy:

Things escalated quickly after that:






Shared living spaces require mutual respect and reasonable accommodation, but one person’s religious practice doesn’t override another’s basic needs — especially during a medical emergency. The woman went out of her way to give advance warning and normally restricts guests to her room, showing consistent consideration.
The roommate’s frustration is understandable on a day-to-day level; wearing hijab at home can feel restrictive when she’d prefer to relax. Yet in this isolated incident, the boyfriend’s brief presence in a common area while helping a seriously ill person shifts the balance. Prioritizing a few minutes of inconvenience over someone’s health would be disproportionate.
Relationship and conflict expert Nedra Glover Tawwab emphasizes in her work on boundaries that “accommodation goes both ways in healthy relationships.” One roommate’s faith-based comfort shouldn’t mean the other forfeits access to shared spaces or help when critically unwell.
In the end, no apology is owed for this emergency. The roommate’s harsh language post-surgery reveals more about lack of empathy than any real wrongdoing. A calm conversation once recovered might help, but backing down entirely would reinforce an unbalanced dynamic where one person’s comfort always trumps the other’s well-being.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
Social media users almost unanimously sided with the poster, shocked at the roommate’s reaction given the medical context:
Many highlighted the emergency overriding normal courtesy:





Several stressed that religious choices are personal and shouldn’t control shared spaces:




Others urged standing firm and questioned the roommate’s compassion:




A one-time medical crisis pushed normal roommate courtesy to its limits, but the reaction it triggered raises bigger questions about empathy and fairness in shared living.
Would you feel obligated to apologize in her shoes, or does the severity of the health scare change everything? How much should one roommate’s religious comfort shape the other’s access to help and common areas? Let us know your thoughts.
