‘I feel like a stranger in my own home’: Girlfriend’s “few days” favor turned into three weeks of her “fragile” best friend Chloe taking over the living room, and now her boyfriend is being managed out of his own home

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  • It's an agreement that feels generous in the moment and only reveals its lack of structure once someone's laundry is on your couch for the third week running and your cats are stressed out and you've been quietly exiled to your own bedroom.

  • Man wearing headphones works on laptop while sitting cross-legged on bed in cozy sunlit bedroom.

    Man wearing headphones sits cross-legged on a bed, working on a laptop in a cozy bedroom.

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • My [32M] girlfriend [29F] let her "struggling" friend crash on our couch and now I feel like a stranger in my own home. How do I handle this without being the villain?

    My girlfriend "Sarah" and I have been living together for two years. Everything was great until about three weeks ago when her best friend

  • "Chloe" went through a messy breakup. Sarah asked if Chloe could stay with us for "a few days" until she found a new place. I agreed because I

  • wanted to be supportive, but three days has turned into three weeks and there is no end in sight.

  • The problem is Chloe has completely taken over our living space. I work a high- stress job and all I want to do when I get home is sit on my

  • Frustrated gamer wearing headphones holds controller and covers face while sitting on living room couch.

    Man wearing headphones reacts in frustration while holding a game controller on a couch.

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • couch, play some games, and hang out with my cats. But every time I walk into the living room, Chloe is there. She's either watching reality

  • TV at max volume, taking up the whole couch with her laundry, or talking loudly on the phone. My cats are stressed because she's constantly moving their stuff

  • around, and I've basically been relegated to my bedroom if I want any peace.

  • I've tried talking to Sarah about it, but she immediately gets defensive. She says Chloe is "fragile" right now and that I'm being heartless for

  • The couch guest situation has a very specific power dynamic baked into it. The person asking for the favor gets to be the generous one. The partner who agreed gets to be the supportive one. And the person who eventually raises the issue of a timeline gets to be the heartless one who wants to throw a fragile person into the street. None of these roles were formally assigned but everyone ends up in them anyway, and by the time the resentment starts building the whole thing is already framed as a character test.

  • wanting to kick her out when she has nowhere to go. I'm not saying she has to live on the street, but I pay 70% of the rent and I currently feel like a guest in a hostel. Last

  • Fragile is doing a lot of heavy lifting in situations like this. It's a real thing that people are sometimes genuinely going through, but it also functions as an indefinite extension on any timeline and a preemptive argument against any boundary. If someone is fragile enough, any request for a move-out date becomes cruelty by default. What never gets addressed is that the person paying 70% of the rent and getting asked to wear headphones for gaming in his own living room is also a person with a stress level and a limit.

  • Man wearing headphones plays video games with controller while relaxing on couch at home.

    Man wearing blue headphones plays a video game with a controller while relaxing on a couch.

    Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.

  • night, I tried to sit down to play some Dota and Chloe actually asked me to use headphones because the "clicking" was giving her a headache. In my own living room.

  • The cats being stressed is somehow the most grounding detail in the whole thing. They didn't sign off on a temporary houseguest either and they have no diplomatic options available to them.

  • I love Sarah, but I'm starting to resent both of them. I feel like my boundaries are being completely ignored in favor of her friend's comfort. How do I

  • The actual conversation that needs to happen isn't about Chloe at all. It's about the fact that Sarah made a unilateral decision about their shared space and then defended it by reframing any pushback as a personality flaw. That pattern is worth addressing regardless of how the couch situation resolves, because a few days has a way of coming back around in other forms.

  • sit Sarah down and make her understand that Chloe needs a hard deadline to move out without it turning into a fight about me "not caring" about her friends?

  •  Gf's friend moved onto our couch "for a few days," it's been three weeks. She's taking over the house, stressing out my cats, and Sarah refuses to set a deadline because her friend is "fragile." How do I reclaim my space?

  • delee76 She's not going to leave, you will have to make her. I've seen this too much. They come in, but they don't leave. You may even have to formally evict her. Does she get mail there?

  • Only Tip9560 You can't avoid this conflict. Your problem is with Sarah so that needs to be your focus.

  • Tell her this is about respect in your relationship and that Chloe has outstayed her welcome and is not a considerate house-guest and you expect Sarah to sort it out before you have to.

  • Be straight up, this is your home too and you agreed to a few days not a few weeks and this is something that is now significantly negatively impact you. Tell her that people break up all the time and that does not

  • excuse them coming into other people's homes and starting relationship issues between them. Don't talk to Chloe, at least not yet, she is Sarah's problem unless she point blank refuses to deal with it.

  • If Sarah does refuse to deal with it then you need to re-evaluate your relationship. After all, what happens the next time or when it is something more serious and she does not have your back a favours her friends over you?

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