I share an apartment with three roommates, but one of them, Sharon, never washes her dishes. She’ll cook like she’s feeding an army, use every single pot and pan we own, and then just walk off like a kitchen fairy will handle the aftermath. It’s not like I hadn’t asked. I’d begged, left sticky notes, even created a cleaning schedule complete with emojis and glittery stars. She just laughed and said she was “too busy.”
At first, I thought maybe she’d get the hint eventually. I’d wash her dishes once or twice, thinking maybe she forgot or had a rough day. But when it became a daily thing and my wrists were sore from scrubbing dried cheese off the baking trays she used for “late-night nachos,” I knew I was being played.
So I came up with a plan. Every time she left dirty dishes, I scooped them into a plastic storage bin—crusty bowls, forks glued with pasta sauce, the whole mess—and slid it quietly under her bed when she wasn’t looking.
It was petty, sure. But so was stealing every clean utensil before anyone else could use it. And besides, I was sick of passive-aggressive reminders. I wanted her to feel it.
Days passed. The smell began to seep out. It started as a faint sour note in the hallway. Then came the full symphony of rotting leftovers. One evening, Sharon burst into the living room, nose scrunched like she’d inhaled hot garbage.
“What the hell is that smell?!” she snapped, flinging open windows.
I shrugged from the couch. “Dunno. Maybe the trash needs taking out?”
Jules, one of our other roommates, ducked her head to hide a laugh. Amber actually left the room because she couldn’t keep a straight face. Sharon stormed back to her room—and then we heard her scream.
She came charging back with the bin in hand, dripping sludge and fury. “Are you INSANE?! You put this under my bed?!”
I calmly looked up. “Those are your dishes. I just didn’t want them in the kitchen anymore.”
She looked ready to explode. “This is disgusting. You could’ve just talked to me.”
I gave her a long look. “I did. Repeatedly.”
She slammed the bin down and stormed into her room, muttering about “immature roommates” and “toxic living situations.” The drama lasted for about a day and a half.
Then things got weird.
The next morning, my shampoo was gone from the shower. Not moved—gone. Same with my conditioner and face wash. In their place was a post-it note on the mirror: “Buy your own.”
I blinked. I had bought my own. But I didn’t feel like picking a fight over soap. I bought travel-sized replacements and started keeping them in a toiletry bag under my bed.
A few days later, my favorite mug disappeared. Then a hoodie. My Tupperware lid collection vanished. Sharon never said a word. She just kept passive-aggressively erasing my existence from shared spaces.
Rather than fight back, I called a house meeting.
Amber showed up with snacks. Jules brought a notebook. Sharon was ten minutes late and looked like she was expecting us to beg her to be reasonable.
I kept it simple. “This isn’t working. And I’m not just talking about dishes anymore. Either we agree on boundaries for shared spaces, or someone has to move out.”
Sharon laughed. “Seriously? You’re acting like I’m some kind of monster.”
Amber jumped in. “You kinda are, though. I’ve been staying at my boyfriend’s just to avoid this place.”
Jules nodded. “We can’t cook, we can’t leave stuff out, and now we’re losing our own things? It’s not fair.”
Sharon blinked. That seemed to actually hit her. For a split second, I saw guilt flicker across her face. Then she stood up, tossed her hair over her shoulder, and said, “Fine. I’ll move out.”
None of us said anything. It was both a relief and a little sad. When Sharon first moved in, she was funny, social, and always organizing movie nights. But over time, work stress, late nights, and who knows what else turned her into the house’s storm cloud.
She left a month later. We helped her carry boxes—not because we liked her, but because we were raised right. The apartment felt twenty pounds lighter the moment she closed the door behind her.
Life got better instantly. The kitchen stayed spotless. Amber started baking again. Jules finally unpacked her blender. We had our space back. We could breathe.
Our new roommate, Sami, was a dream. She labeled her leftovers, always wiped down counters, and actually offered to do dishes even when they weren’t hers. It was like we were living in a commercial for air fresheners and adult responsibility.
I assumed that was the end of the Sharon chapter. But one day, about two months later, I got a message on Instagram.
“Hey. I know things got messy before I left. I just wanted to say I’m sorry. I wasn’t in a good place, and I took it out on everyone around me. You didn’t deserve that. Hope things are better now.”
I stared at the message for a full minute. It wasn’t long, but it was… sincere. Not defensive. Just real.
I showed Jules and Amber. They both sat quietly, processing it.
Amber finally said, “That takes guts.”
Jules nodded. “She was awful, but at least she owned up to it.”
I messaged her back.
“Thanks for saying that. It means a lot. We’re good now. I hope you’re doing okay too.”
She responded with a heart emoji. Nothing more. But still, it left a strange warmth in my chest.
A few weeks later, I ran into her at the grocery store. She looked healthier—well-rested, hair tied back neatly, even wearing earrings, which she never used to bother with.
She smiled. “Hey.”
I smiled back. “Hey.”
She helped me grab a bag of rice from the top shelf and said, “I’m staying with my cousin now. Took some time off work. Started seeing a therapist.”
I nodded. “I’m glad.”
She laughed softly. “Still hate dishes, though. But now I do them in batches like a real adult.”
I laughed, too. That was probably the most human moment we’d ever shared.
After we parted ways, I realized something important. People are rarely just one thing. Sharon wasn’t just “the messy roommate.” She was also someone overwhelmed, someone who didn’t know how to ask for help, someone who let life pile up like her dishes.
That doesn’t mean she wasn’t responsible for her actions. She was. And she paid for it—losing her living space, her friendships, and probably some self-respect along the way. But growth? That counts for something.
Now, every time I do the dishes, I think about how a pile of spaghetti-stained plates turned into a weird, winding lesson on boundaries, patience, and forgiveness.
Living with people will test you. It’ll show you who you are when things get gross, unfair, or downright petty. But if you can face it head-on—and maybe store a lesson or two under your bed along the way—you might come out better for it.
Ever had a roommate who drove you nuts? Or been that roommate yourself? Share your story and give this a like if you’ve ever survived the battlefield that is shared housing. We’ve all been there.