Woman Refuses to Walk Up Stairs for an Hour Because of a Spider, Then Demands Her Roommate Apologize

We all know that moment when an irrational fear completely hijacks your common sense. For one 20-year-old, a standard encounter with an apartment stairwell spider morphed into an hour-long standoff, a puddle of Lysol, and a shattered roommate dynamic.

Living with roommates is always a gamble, but navigating someone’s intense psychological triggers adds a whole new layer of complexity. When a 21-year-old woman moved in with her arachnophobic roommate, she expected a few screams here and there. What she didn’t anticipate was being berated for simply walking up her own stairs to submit a work assignment while her roommate refused to budge.

The tension finally snapped over a tiny stair-dwelling pest, forcing everyone to question where the line is drawn between supporting a friend and enabling an unmanaged condition. Curious how it all unfolded? The full story is right below.

Woman Refuses to Walk Up Stairs for an Hour Because of a Spider, Then Demands Her Roommate Apologize

AITAH for not believing my roommate’s “phobia?”?

The stage was set with a crucial piece of context—the author wasn’t just a harsh skeptic, but someone who intimately understood the crippling weight of severe anxiety.

Okay, disclaimer up front. I understand the seriousness of phobias. I myself have been in therapy for an irrational fear of vomiting that used to be debilitating, but this is...

But it's the way she goes about it that's kind of insane. Like the other day, I was talking about how my boyfriend and I got sushi, and I said...

Even with the threat entirely neutralized, the psychological block remained firmly in place, transforming a minor inconvenience into a full-blown behavioral blockade.

My other roommate has much more patience for this than I do, and one day when we were coming home, there was a spider underneath our open stairs. Mind you,...

But this time, she screams and refuses to walk up the stairs. My other roommate blocks off the spider so she can walk up, but she still won't do it....

After about 15 minutes of trying to convince her it's okay, my other roommate has to head out, and I just go up the stairs because I had to submit...

She ends up standing at the end of the stairs for an hour before going up, and then eventually comes into the apartment and starts berating me about how she...

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But after her screaming at the mention of the word "spider," I'm starting to think she's just afraid of spiders and maybe overreacting. AITAH, or is arachnophobia really that serious?

Updates

EDIT: Okay, thank you everyone for sharing your experiences with arachnophobia! I'm starting to understand her reactions more, but I'm still not sure that I'm at fault for staying at...

The line between genuine disability and demanding behavior is often blurred when extreme anxiety enters a shared living space. According to the National Institute of Mental Health, around 12.5% of Americans suffer from a specific phobia. However, the cultural conversation around mental health has sometimes weaponized the concept of support, leading people to demand endless accommodations from untrained peers rather than seeking professional help.

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The roommate’s intense reaction is a textbook illustration of why accommodating avoidance behaviors often backfires. While it feels cruel to leave someone paralyzed by fear, psychological consensus agrees that bending to the demands of a phobia ultimately makes the condition worse. Supporting manageable steps toward progress is far more beneficial than enabling avoidance. By expecting her roommates to drop their daily obligations to coax her up the stairs, the roommate is unconsciously reinforcing her own panic response.

For anyone dealing with a severely phobic friend or family member, the most supportive action is to set firm boundaries. Instead of participating in hour-long standoffs, gently but firmly redirect the person toward exposure therapy, which is the gold standard for treating specific phobias. The roommates should stop apologizing and start encouraging the young woman to seek the professional help she so clearly needs.

Community Opinions

Reddit came in hot—nearly unanimous in their defense of the original poster, with many pointing out that managing a condition is a personal responsibility.

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u/Broken-Ice-Cube Okay I was fully prepared to call you an AH - there's a huge difference between being scared of something and having a full on phobia - but screaming...

She ends up standing at the end of the stairs for an hour before going up, and then eventually comes into the apartment and starts berating me about how she...

Even if we work off the assumption that her arachnophobia is real, which yeah phobias can cause you to have over the top and irrational reactions… it’s still her condition...

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u/fuchsnudeln NTA BUT, it's as serious as any other phobia, but it's also fully out of line for her to demand you all stand outside for an hour with her...

u/Nester1953 There are phobias and then there's drama. And secondary gain. Lots and lots of secondary gain. I have no doubt that your roommate has a serious, genuine aversion to...

u/BargerianJade
NTA
she's not afraid of spiders, she's afraid of not getting enough attention

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u/No-Being4681 That's arachnophobia for you. I am going to therapy because of it and I would react pretty much like her but without the screaming. (I neither wouldn't get angry...

u/FuzzyCat_6578 NTA. If her phobia was actually this bad she would need intensive therapy and possibly some time in a psych word or some kind of carer. She can’t place...

u/A-R-U NTA. I got arachnophobia. "Asking the postman if he could remove a spider on my door" bad. But expecting others to inconvenience themself and push their tasks back for...

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u/GoblinLoblaw
NTA it’s not your job to babysit her through life. She needs therapy if it’s actually that bad.

u/AlzheimerTriviaNight NTA.  I would tell her that you are not going to be able to support her in her arachnophobia and she needs to find actual professional help for it....

u/Sufficient_Engine_38 NTA. Whether she has a phobia or not isn’t the issue. You do take it seriously if you change the word used and try to support when can. You...

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u/HotelOk9725 NTA - Does she behave at work or college like this? I’m not the biggest fan of spiders myself and would need someone else to remove the beastie for...

u/pipasunflower NTA. I suffer from some phobias myself. Specific words don‘t trigger me to an extent.. like yeah ill start tensing up when people talk about my phobias, but i...

u/LemmePet Your Roommate has arachnophobia all right, and it looks like it's time for a sit down where you talk about expectations. Does she want you to stop using the...

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u/Angel_in_the_snow NTA- some of these comments are funny and projecting. Yes phobias are completely real and can be absolutely debilitating however that’s not the part being debated. It was the...

A few sympathetic commenters reminded everyone that phobias can indeed look like dramatic overreactions, even when the terror is entirely real to the sufferer.

Navigating a shared living space is tricky enough without needing a crisis negotiation team every time a bug appears on the staircase. While having a severe phobia is undeniably difficult, weaponizing it to demand hour-long emotional support sessions from roommates crosses a major boundary.

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Do you think the roommate was genuinely paralyzed by her arachnophobia, or did she just want the extra attention? And how would you handle a roommate who expected you to stop your entire day for a dead bug?

Share your hot take below!

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