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She Locked Her Own Kitchen Cabinet to Stay Alive, Now Her Roommate Says It’s “Hostile”

by Charles Butler
April 20, 2026
in Social Issues

When they first moved in together, the arrangement felt manageable.

One of them had a severe nut allergy. Not the kind you casually mention and move on from, but the kind that can turn a tiny mistake into a medical emergency. The other liked peanut butter and snacks with almonds. They talked it through like adults. Nuts were allowed, just kept separate. Clean up properly. Be mindful.

Simple rules. Reasonable expectations.

At least, that’s how it started.

'AITA for putting a lock on my allergy safe cabinet after my roommate kept cross contaminating my food?'

I have a severe nut allergy. It’s not airborne dangerous, but if I eat even a trace amount, I go into anaphylaxis and need my EpiPen.

When I moved in with my roommate, Taylor, I made this extremely clear.

We agreed that she could have peanut butter and nuts in the apartment, but she had to keep them in her own designated cupboard and wash everything thoroughly.

The problem is that Taylor is very forgetful. I’ve caught her using my safe wooden salad spoons to stir her peanut-butter oatmeal,

and she often leaves open bags of almonds sitting directly on my cutting board.

Every time I bring it up, she says, Oops, my bad, I forgot! Last week, I found a smear of peanut butter on the handle of my toaster.

That was the final straw. I realized I couldn't trust her to be careful in the shared pantry, so I bought a small,

locking plastic bin for my essential safe dry goods and put a child safety lock on one specific kitchen cabinet for my pots and pans.

When Taylor saw the lock, she flipped out. She said I was making her feel like a criminal or a toddler in her own home.

She thinks a lock is an aggressive hostile roommate move and that I’m being ableist against her ADHD because she can't help being forgetful.

The problems didn’t arrive all at once. They crept in quietly.

A wooden spoon used for peanut butter, then returned to the shared drawer.
A bag of almonds left open on a cutting board.
A quick rinse instead of a proper wash.

Nothing dramatic on its own. Easy to brush off. And every time it came up, the same casual apology followed.

“Oops, I forgot.”

At first, she accepted it. People slip up. No one is perfect.

But there’s a difference between a harmless oversight and a pattern that puts someone at risk.

And eventually, that difference becomes impossible to ignore.

The moment that changed everything wasn’t loud or confrontational.

She noticed a streak of peanut butter on the toaster handle. Just sitting there, like it belonged.

It wasn’t the mess that bothered her. It was what it meant.

That even the things she touched every day weren’t safe anymore.

That her health depended on someone who kept proving they couldn’t be careful.

That realization settles differently. It doesn’t spark anger right away. It creates something quieter. A kind of steady unease.

So instead of arguing again, she made a decision.

She didn’t demand new rules.

She didn’t ban nuts from the apartment.

She simply took control of what she could.

A small locking container for her food. A safety latch on one cabinet for her cookware. Nothing flashy. Nothing meant to provoke.

Just a barrier between her and a risk she couldn’t afford.

It was practical. Thoughtful, even.

Until her roommate saw it.

Taylor’s reaction was immediate.

She didn’t see a safety measure. She saw an accusation.

The lock, in her eyes, was insulting. It made her feel like she was being treated like a child. Like she couldn’t be trusted in her own home.

And then the conversation took a sharper turn.

She called it ableist.

Taylor has ADHD, and she said her forgetfulness wasn’t something she could just switch off. The lock, to her, wasn’t about safety. It was a judgment on something she struggles with.

That’s where things stopped being simple.

Because yes, ADHD affects memory. It affects consistency. It can make routines harder to stick to.

But it doesn’t erase responsibility.

And it certainly doesn’t reduce the seriousness of the consequences.

This wasn’t about leaving lights on or forgetting groceries. This was about repeated actions that could send someone into anaphylaxis.

There’s no soft way to say that.

What’s interesting is that the lock didn’t punish Taylor.

It removed pressure from both of them.

No more constant reminders. No more anxiety over shared utensils. No more guessing whether something was safe to touch.

In a way, it solved the exact problem Taylor said she struggled with.

But instead of seeing that, she focused on how it made her feel.

And feelings, especially when mixed with guilt, can distort things.

When someone realizes they’ve made the same mistake more than once, especially when the stakes are high, it’s uncomfortable.

Owning that fully is even harder.

So sometimes the reaction shifts. It turns outward. The focus moves from “I messed up” to “you’re overreacting.”

It’s not always intentional. But it happens.

And in this case, it created a strange imbalance.

One person quietly trying to protect their health. The other reacting to the discomfort of being reminded they haven’t been careful enough.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Most responses were firmly on one side. People pointed out that medical safety isn’t something you compromise on.

Knyghtlorde − Remind her, involuntary manslaughter is a crime, you are protecting her from her inability to take serious issues into consideration.

TiredAndTiredOfIt − NTA Anaphylactic to tree nuts here. My allergy is bad enough I am senstive to aerosols.

My Mom, my wife, my sister, one brother, all my cousins, my boss, and my doctor all have severe ADHD.

Exactly ZERO of them have ever made a mistake re nut exposure. Why? Because they arent lying to use ADHD to cover for their lazy assholery.

Sorceress683 − NTA. ADHD won't k__l her but your allergy CAN k__l you. Move out now. Document the situation thoroughly -

talk with your landlord about either breaking your lease or moving to a different unit.

Do NOT pay for the rent difference until she can get a new roommate, she has effectively forced you out.

ADHD might explain forgetfulness, but it doesn’t justify repeated exposure to a serious risk.

Trick_Few − NTA Your medical requirements supersede her feelings.

dovahkiitten16 − As someone with ADHD when I had a deadly allergic roommate I just didn’t buy stuff with peanuts because I knew I could make a careless mistake.

You’re not being ableist. If anything, changing the environment to accommodate someone’s disability is the right thing to do. They don’t have to worry about forgetting anymore!

(Also for the obvious having ADHD isn’t a valid excuse for life and death matters).

SummitJunkie7 − NTA for the lock, you do what you have to do to keep yourself safe.

But you also need to be actively working on changing your roommate situation - this person is risking your life regularly and rather than realizing how badly she's messing up...

that she's putting your life at risk, she is more worried about how the locks are making her feel.

She's not taking the slightest steps to be careful - she is a ticking time bomb for you.

Some even said the lock was the least dramatic option available. A calm solution instead of an escalating argument.

Same-Spare-3415 − NTA. I would laugh if it wasn’t deadly serious. Ableist? This is a life or death allergy not an annoyance like using up

all the paper towels and forgetting to replace the roll, or leaving the lid off the toothpaste.

PotooooooooChip − Nta. You're actually ACCOMODATING her disability by introducing a practical solution that acknowledges her struggle with memory.

You have not assumed she is incapable of remembering this based on an ableist stereotype,

you have had it proven to you that she is not currently capable of remembering this based on the hard evidence that . .. she isn't.

The ableist move would be to assume that all people are equally capable of remembering things, assume malicious intent, and file a police report about her deliberately attempting to poison...

I assume she feels embarassed and s__t that her attempts to remember & be careful have failed (or, worst case scenario, is regular entitled and doesn't see why she should...

and is lashing out with buzzwords about it. But she's objectively very lucky you've been this patient.   - signed, someone with ADHD

QuestionMaker207 − NTA. Either your roommate is trying to k__l you, or she feels guilty and has turned that guilt into anger at you because she can't handle being angry...

Either way, protect yourself. You might want to renegotiate with your roommate to just have everything you're allergic to forbidden in the house.

I am a little confused though, because peanuts aren't nuts, they're legumes.

Do you have both the peanut and a nut allergy?

Azraeddit − NTA. As someone who has ADHD, f*cK her. This is absolutely irresponsible and lazy of her, she doesn’t get to blame it on her ADHD when it’s a...

It’s her responsibility to make sure she remembers, no matter what she has to do. Genuinely felt my heart rate rocket up after reading this, good lord.

When small things add up. When apologies stop feeling reassuring. When safety starts to feel uncertain in a place that should feel easy.

The lock didn’t create distance between them. It acknowledged that distance was already there.

Sometimes, protecting yourself looks subtle. A small change. A quiet adjustment.

And sometimes, that’s enough to reveal a much bigger problem.

So the real question isn’t whether the lock was too much.

It’s why it became necessary at all.

 

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 4/4 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/4 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/4 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/4 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/4 votes | 0%

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

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