If you could do it to me, I can do it to you.

Living under someone else’s roof often comes with rules, but for one college student, those rules felt more like punishment than preparation for adulthood. In her early 20s, she worked full time, attended college, paid rent, and still found herself treated like a child when her stepfather imposed strict late-night internet cutoffs, even though she helped pay for the service.

Years later, life flipped the script. After losing his house due to failed financial schemes, the same stepfather moved into her home. Now the bills are in her name, including the internet and streaming services he enjoys nightly. Faced with familiar frustration, she made a quiet decision that many readers found oddly satisfying. The twist lies in how she chose to handle it, sparking a wave of reactions ranging from applause to disbelief across social media.

If you could do it to me, I can do it to you.

Everything started back when the poster was just trying to survive college and adulthood.

When I was 20, I lived with my mom and step dad in his mom’s house. I paid 400.00 in rent and paid for my own groceries and covered one...

This was to “set me up” for being an adult. I shared a room with my sister (18). Later I shared a room with her fiancé/husband. She also paid 400....

Late nights became unavoidable due to school and work demands.

My sister and I were both in college and worked full time. My step dad would get mad because we would be on the computer until early morning hours doing...

He got a device and it turned off the internet (which we paid for), at 10:00 via remote. If he got a wild hair, he would keep it off.

Years later, circumstances forced a role reversal.

Now he lives with me and my mom because he lost his house with get rich quick schemes. He started staying up late watching tv. I pay for all of...

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That frustration led to a familiar solution.

Well, I put a limit on the internet, so now he has to go to sleep at 12:00 and can’t watch anything until after 6:00am. He’s upset his tv no...

He doesn’t know I put a limit on it and on his tv solely and the rest of the devices in the apartment work perfectly fine.

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This situation taps into long-standing resentment mixed with a desire for fairness. When adults feel controlled or dismissed during formative years, those experiences can linger far longer than expected. For the poster, the internet restrictions weren’t just about Wi-Fi, they symbolized a lack of trust and respect while she was already pulling her weight financially and academically.

From a psychological standpoint, mirrored behavior often emerges when unresolved frustration meets a power shift. According to Dr. John Gottman of The Gottman Institute, “Unaddressed resentment doesn’t disappear, it waits for a safer moment to surface.” In this case, the moment arrived when roles reversed and control landed squarely in the poster’s hands.

That said, while the action feels satisfying, it does raise questions about communication versus retaliation. Setting household rules is reasonable when you’re paying the bills, but secrecy adds another emotional layer. Clear boundaries, openly stated, tend to reduce long-term conflict, even when the other person previously behaved unfairly.

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Practical advice would involve reframing the rule as a household standard rather than a personal consequence. Explaining expectations calmly can prevent resentment from compounding on both sides. Still, it’s understandable why the poster chose this route, especially given the history involved. The challenge lies in deciding whether the goal is peace, justice, or closure, because each leads to a very different outcome.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Many users openly celebrated the role reversal and found it deeply satisfying.

Turdfish_Dinner − I want to buy you a drink! You are my new hero.

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NarwhalTerrible4680 − Ohhhh that's so satisfying! I wouldn't be able to keep myself from rubbing it in his face though. What an ass of a human forcing you to share...

9lobaldude − What goes around comes around

Duckr74 − Make it 10pm and keep us Updateme! OP

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Others suggested escalating the pettiness for maximum impact.

CatlessBoyMom − Go for the double petty, start moving the time back by one minute each day for the next 2 weeks. Cutting off right in the middle of his...

PsychologicalRun7444 − I'd go a little worse... Don't turn it on and off on the hour. Turn it on at 6:10 AM and shut it off at 11:50 PM.

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In the morning he might be a little late for morning news. At night, he'd never see the end of shows that start at 11:00

mtngoatjoe − Play this as a long con. Let him stew on it for as long as possible. Then someday when it comes up in a random conversation just say,...

When he asks why, say, "Well, you taught me to be an adult. And you taught me that as an adult, I can run my home how I see fit,...

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Just like you did with me when I was in college and trying to use the internet to study. You showed me that adults don't have to have good reasons...

Hiker2190 − Nice. But I would've made the same time restrictions he made on you, AND I would have told him WHY nothing works after 10pm.

Realistic-Lunch-2914 − Make it 10PM and you're golden.

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Some users focused on fairness and accountability.

spaced2259 − I hope he is paying 400 in rent, buying his own groceries and paying 1 bill as he is an adult

Excellent_Ad1132 − You pay for the wifi, get the password from your provider and you change it and take over the wifi. I have full access to my router and...

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Piddy3825 − petty revenge - best served on a timer...

Contrantier − "Dad, you i__ot, I'm doing homework this late. Do you want me to not graduate college? Are you trying to make me live here even longer? Us using...

SoftwareMaintenance − Huh? Why isn't op shutting the Internet down at 10:00pm like step dad did?

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Comfortable_Guide622 − Tell him - act like a jerk, get treated like a jerk

This story struck a nerve because it blends old resentment with poetic timing. After years of feeling restricted and dismissed, the poster finally holds the control she once lacked. While some see it as petty, others see it as earned fairness. The situation raises a bigger question about whether mirroring past behavior brings closure or simply reopens old wounds. If you were in her place, would you quietly enjoy the symmetry, or would you confront it head-on and say why the rules exist?

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