A Reddit user shared a roommate saga that could make anyone question whether it’s about faith, boundaries or just bad manners. The conflict began when she, a Jewish woman, asked her roommate’s permission to hang a mezuzah by the front door. It’s a small religious case traditionally tilted at an angle, symbolizing compromise and balance.
Her roommate agreed… until the tilt drove her into a screaming rage. What followed was a bizarre back-and-forth involving holes in the wall, a shade of spackle that wasn’t “perfect enough,” and a final outburst where the poster snapped and told her roommate to “get over it.”
Was this an insensitive dismissal of a mental health condition or a fair response to unreasonable demands? Let’s break it down.
One woman’s attempt to honor her Jewish faith with a mezuzah turned into a fiery dispute with her OCD-diagnosed roommate over its tilt and wall marks









Sometimes a fight isn’t about the object itself but about the tilt of control it represents. OP wanted to put up a mezuzah, a deeply symbolic, religiously significant object, tilted as Jewish tradition prescribes.
The roommate initially agreed but then exploded when the angle set off her supposed OCD, escalating from mild complaint to full-blown hostility. OP took the mezuzah down, patched the wall, and was still berated because the filler shade wasn’t “perfect.” Eventually, OP snapped: “Get over it.” Cue accusations of insensitivity.
On one side, OP sees a roommate dismissing religious practice as though her discomfort overrides tradition. On the other, the roommate frames her demands as a mental health necessity. The satire writes itself: one person’s sacred object vs. another’s need for perpendicular lines and somehow both feel oppressed.
This conflict highlights a bigger issue: the way “OCD” is often misunderstood and misused. Many conflate it with mere perfectionism. In reality, obsessive-compulsive disorder involves intrusive thoughts and compulsions that often have little to do with straight picture frames.
According to the International OCD Foundation, over 2% of the population suffers from OCD, and it typically manifests as distressing, unwanted thoughts paired with ritualized behaviors meant to reduce anxiety.
Clinical psychologist Dr. Steven Phillipson explains: “OCD is not about being neat or particular. It’s about being terrorized by intrusive thoughts and using compulsions to neutralize that terror.”
His insight underscores why the roommate’s “everything must be straight” claim sounds closer to pop-culture shorthand than clinical reality. If she does have OCD, therapy would encourage gradual exposure, not bending everyone else’s behavior to her compulsions.
For OP, the most constructive path may not be further arguments about wall hangings but clarifying boundaries. Religious expression deserves respect, and so does mental health. But enabling demands that escalate into controlling someone else’s faith practice is unsustainable.
A calm conversation, perhaps mediated or documented, could set expectations. And if the living situation remains volatile, the healthiest choice may be finding new roommates.
At its heart, this isn’t about a mezuzah or even OCD. It’s about one person struggling with control and another refusing to erase their identity to appease it.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
These users questioned the roommate’s OCD claim






One, with OCD, criticized the roommate for not managing her condition, as accommodating compulsions worsens it


One sought clarification on the diagnosis, while another suspected manipulation



This group stressed that the roommate’s initial consent and failure to research mezuzot negate her complaints.


These people urged keeping the mezuzah and reconsidering the living situation


What began as a simple mezuzah installation spiraled into a battle over angles, wall patches, and the meaning of OCD. While mental health deserves compassion, Reddit overwhelmingly sided with OP: her roommate’s behavior crossed the line from valid struggle into unreasonable control.
So, was OP wrong to snap and tell her roommate to “get over it”? Or was it a moment of much-needed boundary-setting after too many meltdowns? Would you stay in this living arrangement or start hunting for a new roommate ASAP?










