AITA dog sitting for my boss and saying no to her husband’s friends crashing at the house?
A 21-year-old woman agreed to dogsit for her boss and her husband for nearly two weeks while they vacationed – a generous favor that was going smoothly until the first night, when the boss texted asking if her husband’s old bandmate could crash in the basement.
The basement had no bathroom, no real bed (maybe an air mattress), and its only door was right near the bedroom the woman was using – with no locks. She politely said she felt uneasy about a man she’d never met staying there, especially alone in the house. The boss’s texts turned short and cold, making her worry she’d offended her or caused trouble. Now she wonders if prioritizing her safety and comfort made her the asshole.

‘AITA dog sitting for my boss and saying no to her husband’s friends crashing at the house?’
The arrangement started as a simple favor:


The basement setup raised red flags:



The polite refusal and reaction:




Asking a young woman (21) to stay alone in a house with an unknown adult man – even in a separate basement – is a serious boundary violation and safety concern. Women are socialized to be hyper-aware of potential threats from strange men, especially in isolated situations with no locks or easy escape. The boss’s casual request shows a dangerous lack of awareness or disregard for that reality, turning a favor into an uncomfortable (and potentially risky) obligation.
The power dynamic makes it even worse: she’s the boss, so saying no feels high-stakes – fear of retaliation, awkwardness at work, or being seen as “difficult.” That pressure invalidates the “it’s just a question” defense; when a superior asks, it rarely feels optional. The responder’s polite refusal was exactly the right move – honest, non-confrontational, and centered on her comfort without attacking anyone.
The boss’s short, cold texts afterward are classic passive-aggression or guilt-tripping, shifting blame to the employee for having boundaries. This is common in workplace exploitation of favors; bosses often expect unlimited goodwill without reciprocity.
Practical advice: never mix professional and personal favors again – it blurs lines and creates leverage issues. If the boss acts distant or punitive at work, document it and consider HR involvement. Prioritizing personal safety over pleasing a boss is not rude – it’s self-respect. The woman did nothing wrong; the boss crossed the line by asking.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
The Reddit community overwhelmingly supported the OP as NTA, calling the boss’s request inappropriate, unsafe, and entitled:

![[Reddit User] − NTA Who on earth asks any woman who is dog/house sitting if it's okay for some random man they don't know from a hole in the wall...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1768550703856-2.webp)






















No one not even a boss gets to pressure a young woman into staying overnight with a strange man in an unfamiliar house with poor security, just because it’s “convenient” for their friend. The OP’s polite refusal was a healthy boundary, not rudeness. The boss’s request was inappropriate and unsafe, and the cold response afterward is guilt-tripping, not justified anger.
Do you think she should stop doing favors for her boss entirely, or just draw the line at overnight stays? Would you have said no immediately, or tried to be polite like she did? How do you handle bosses who blur professional and personal boundaries? Share your thoughts below.
