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Friends (and friends-of-friends) sometimes feel entitled to your space. I'm from a city to which many people spend their spring breaks, their summer vacations, and their beachy dream holidays, so occasionally I'll get demands from acquaintances to crash on my couch. No stranger to the allure of my city, I totally get it, but there's a line and there's a limit to my hospitality when it comes to a crasher.
When the woman in this next story was accosted by a friend-of-a-friend who essentially was trying to boot her out of her studio apartment, the woman cordially told her to kick rocks. Sorry about your ‘cute little staycation’ with your boyfriend—book a hotel like the other adults.
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The image does not depict the actual subjects of the story. Subjects are models.
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Homeowner refuses to let a friend-of-a-friend kick her out of her apartment so she can have a staycation with her boyfriend, enforcing healthy friendship boundaries instead: ‘Next time I'll offer her the laundry room’
Your home is your sacred space. Once a woman lives on her own for a while, your living space—whether it's a 4,000 square foot house, a farmstead, or a studio city apartment—has been meticulously curated into a home. Crafted from the home decor catalogs, the farmer's market treasures, and your favorite scented candle, your space is YOUR space, so when someone comes to try and sever that important bond, they might just have to face the consequences of their entitlement.
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