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AITAH for telling my husband that his sister can’t live with us?
This image is for illustration only, and the subjects are models; the image does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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On one side, it feels cruel for the protagonist to tell her sister-in-law not to move in. But on the other hand, it's completely understandable to want your living environment to be comfortable, safe, and without added stresses, especially when you have a newborn baby.
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New mom refuses to let sister-in-law crash on their couch with a newborn in the other room, husband acts like she’s the bad guy: “The last thing I need is another adult here adding to the chaos”
Welcome back ladies and gentlemen of the internet. Your living situation can encompass your quality of life in ways that you don't understand until you're in that situation. For me, I used to live with a roommate that I hated. The energy around her was stifled, it was tense. She was passive aggressive, she lied to me, she gaslit me, she once even woke up my friend at a sleepover and told her to clean the kitchen. She accused me of things I never did, she would send me long paragraph messages about my fraudulent behavior. It felt like it couldn't get any worse, but since it was also so close to the surface of everything, I tried my best to ignore it instead of taking action. When I finally decided to move out, I felt myself change in a fundamental way.
In the story below, the protagonist is a woman with a newborn baby in a small two bedroom apartment. Her husband's sister asks to stay with them indefinitely. She's turned away, but not without judgement. Read the full story below.