It’s hard to admit when you’re the bad guy.
It was morning and I was in my one-bedroom college apartment that I shared with my roommate Peggy. I went into her room, technically the “living room,” and I opened the curtain to see if she was here. She was and she was pissed. Her sharp blue eyes lasered in on me. She yelled, “What are you doing?!” I stepped back from her “room” and I moved to the kitchen. I’m scared and I don’t know what to say.
After a few tense minutes, I asked in a jittery voice, “Did I do something wrong?”
She screamed, “Yes!”
I squeaked, “I wanted to ask you if I could play music when I make breakfast.”
She yelled back, “Use common sense and announce when you’re here!”
I didn’t deserve my roommate’s wrath, or so I thought. It was easier to accuse her of acting irrationally instead of looking outside of myself and realising how my mistakes led to the crumbling of our living situation and pushed her to move out.
On the surface, Peggy and I were similar. Both of us loved travel, we had boyfriends, and listened to indie rock bands. Our likeness ended there.
Peggy was extroverted and often brought many of her friends back to the apartment, while I was introverted and only often brought one friend back. She was an early bird and went to bed at 9 or 10pm, while I was the nocturnal bat and chatted with my friends over Skype until the wee hours of the morning.
There were cracks in our relationship from the beginning and I initially was in denial.
Top Comments
You let a dog shit in the apartment, but didn't clean it up? You seriously were waiting for your flatmate to tell you how to act appropriately in that situation??
Hey, don't be so critical - there are dog people and cat people. Sheesh
Well, this was a strange story :/
Right? I’d guess there’s a whole lot being left out of this story. The restraining order brings up a lot of questions for me.