Boundaries in relationships often show up in the smallest places, like towels. For one single mom of three, that boundary became a breaking point when her boyfriend repeatedly ignored her requests not to use her children’s towels after intimacy.
Despite buying him his own designated towel and explaining how difficult laundry is without a washer and dryer, he brushed it off as “just a towel.” But when he grabbed her son’s towel after a morning quickie, she hit her limit and told him she needed a break. Was she overreacting, or was this about far more than fabric?
One woman’s attempt to keep her household running smoothly unraveled when her boyfriend repeatedly used her kids’ towels for his personal messes



















Boundaries aren’t about the towel, they’re about trust. Dr. John Gottman, a renowned relationship researcher, stresses that respect for a partner’s requests, even “small” ones, is a key marker of lasting couples. “It’s not the size of the issue; it’s how partners respond to each other’s needs that matters most,” he notes on the Gottman Institute’s blog.
The boyfriend’s repeated towel use wasn’t just inconvenient; it turned into what psychologists call boundary violations. According to Psych Central, when someone repeatedly ignores agreed-upon limits, it erodes emotional safety and creates resentment.
Some people might argue that ADHD, which the boyfriend reportedly has, explains the forgetfulness. But experts caution against excusing harmful patterns. As Dr. Ari Tuckman, author of ADHD After Dark, explains: “ADHD can affect memory and follow-through, but partners must still take responsibility for behaviors that impact others.”
There’s also a hygiene angle. Towels are considered “high-risk” items for bacteria and viruses when not washed promptly. The American Cleaning Institute advises that bath towels should be washed every 3 uses, and never shared, especially between adults and children. Using children’s towels for intimate cleanup is not just disrespectful, it’s unsanitary.
What should happen next? Experts recommend a sit-down conversation where the mom clarifies that this boundary is non-negotiable. If the boyfriend still minimizes her concerns, it may signal deeper incompatibility. Respect is the foundation of trust, and once cracks appear, it’s hard to rebuild.
See what others had to share with OP:
These users slammed his gross disrespect






This group called out his weaponized incompetence, dismissing his ADHD excuse as a cop-out



Some commenters went darker, suggesting his towel choice might be intentional and creepy



Some users rallied behind the Redditor, insisting it’s not “just a towel” but a matter of respect, urging her to dump him


At first glance, this might sound like a silly spat over towels. But for this mom, it symbolized something bigger: repeated disrespect, ignored boundaries, and unnecessary work added to an already exhausting life. While she called it a “break,” many Redditors argued she should make it permanent.
So what do you think? Was she right to draw a hard line over towels, or should she have let it slide one more time? And if a partner won’t respect the smallest rules, can you really trust them with bigger ones?









