Some roommate dramas revolve around dirty dishes or late-night noise. Others? They involve aggressive dogs, fridge politics, and claims of being “forced” to quit veganism.
One Redditor shared how her living situation with a vegan dog mom unraveled into chaos. From chewed-up belongings to surprise dog poop, the tension boiled over when the roommate demanded money for vet bills and then accused her of being the reason she couldn’t afford to stay vegan.
The tale left Reddit shaking their heads, laughing, and debating how far roommate responsibilities really go. Want the full scoop? Grab your popcorn.
A woman plans to move out after her roommate’s dog ruins her belongings and Julie blames her for quitting veganism over vet bill disputes


















At its heart, this story highlights two intertwined issues: financial mismanagement and toxic roommate dynamics.
First, let’s address the vegan angle. Research shows that plant-based diets don’t have to break the bank.
According to a study published in The Lancet Planetary Health, people following vegan or vegetarian diets in high-income countries spend up to one-third less on groceries than those on meat-heavy diets. Staples like beans, rice, oats, frozen vegetables, and lentils are some of the cheapest, most nutrient-dense foods on the market.
So when Julie claims veganism is “too expensive,” it sounds less like nutritional science and more like an excuse. Nutritionist Dr. Reed Mangels notes: “With good planning, vegan diets can be healthy, nutritionally adequate, and may provide health benefits for the prevention and treatment of certain diseases.” The problem isn’t the diet, it’s how she’s managing it.
Second, the roommate dynamic. Psychologists often warn that unhealthy cohabitation patterns, especially when one roommate is forced to carry the emotional or financial weight of the other, create resentment. Julie expecting her roommate to cover vet bills or adjust her grocery practices smacks of misplaced responsibility. Pets, like children, are a personal choice, not a communal one.
Ultimately, OP isn’t “forcing” anyone to do anything. Julie is making her own dietary and financial choices, then scapegoating her roommate to avoid accountability.
Experts would call this projection, blaming others for the consequences of your own decisions. And as Dr. Ramani Durvasula, a clinical psychologist, explains: “Projection is a defense mechanism that allows someone to avoid owning their behavior.”
Check out how the community responded:
These Redditors voted OP was not the jerk, slamming Julie’s entitlement over vet bills and fridge rules




One roasted Julie’s rug poop excuse as childish







While some dismissed her veganism sob story as a cop-out




Another user acknowledged her dislike but pushed for a new roommate to avoid drama


This commenter urged finding a new place

One user suggested trading vet bill help for rug cleaning costs




What started as a clash over fridge space and dog poop spiraled into a full-blown roommate war, complete with accusations of “forcing” someone out of veganism. But Reddit was clear: the OP isn’t responsible for Julie’s diet, debts, or dog.
Would you have lasted as long as OP did or would the rug incident have been your last straw? And should roommates ever help each other with pet bills, or is that always crossing the line? Share your take below!










