AITA for changing all the locks on my house because my girlfriend keeps locking me out of the bedroom at night

Shaco11175 3891 comments

The user, a 29-year-old man (OP), purchased a house where he lives with his 36-year-old girlfriend.

Early disagreements involved allocating space within the home, resulting in OP taking a smaller office while his girlfriend received the second-largest room for her office and occupied the second living room for her use.

The main conflict began after an argument regarding financial responsibility for house issues like pest control and modifications, where OP agreed to cover all costs.

Following a subsequent argument where OP admits to yelling, his girlfriend began retaliating by locking the bedroom door at night, forcing OP to sleep elsewhere. This pattern repeated after a brief reconciliation following a vacation.

After returning from a two-week work trip to find the door still locked, OP changed all the locks on the house, leading his girlfriend to record him.

OP is now questioning whether his frustration and subsequent action of changing the locks make him the person at fault.

AITA for changing all the locks on my house because my girlfriend keeps locking me out of the bedroom at night
‘AITA for changing all the locks on my house because my girlfriend keeps locking me out of the bedroom at night’

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The Comments Section Came Alive:

The crowd poured into the comments, bringing a blend of heated opinions, solid advice, and a few reality checks along the way.

The core conflict revolves around the OP's response to his girlfriend's chosen m**hod of conflict resolution: punitive isolation by locking him out of the shared bedroom.

While OP acknowledges his own unacceptable behavior of yelling during arguments, his girlfriend's consistent use of bedroom exclusion acts as a controlling measure that escalates tension rather than resolves underlying issues.

The OP felt pushed to an extreme measure after repeated attempts to communicate failed. The situation presents a clear impa*se between boundary setting and punitive control.

Is the girlfriend justified in using the bedroom lock as a defense mechanism following conflict escalation, or does OP's ultimate action of changing the locks represent a necessary, albeit extreme, response to reclaim his space and es**blish a different behavioral contract?

Where should the line be drawn regarding acceptable retaliatory actions in a shared living situation?