Most people have keepsakes or mementos from their family or friends. When that person passes on, the items become even more cherished.
They often aren't valuable or even something someone has a daily use for. They're kept for sentimental reasons.
A man in conflict with his significant other over keepsakes from his late grandmother turned to the "Am I The A**hole" (AITA) subReddit for feedback.
KookyShelter6075 asked:
"AITA for making my girlfriend (GF) dig knitted blankets out of a dumpster?"
The original poster (OP) explained:
"I moved in with my girlfriend about 9 months ago. Most of the items in the home belong to her/were chosen by her."
"I didn't move in with very much except my clothing, TV, Xbox and 4 blankets that were knitted and sewn by my late grandmother. Then there's some stuff we've bought together."
"My girlfriend generally has a beige aesthetic and thought my colourful, patterned patchwork blankets were ugly. She refused to let me use them on the beds, so I just kept them in a trash bag in our linen closet."
"On Monday, I went to grab a roll of tp from that closet and noticed my incredibly sentimental blankets were gone. I asked my gf if she had moved them and she joked about having moved them to the dumpster outside our apartment a couple days before."
"I told her if they weren't back and in pristine condition by the end of the night, that I was leaving as she'd crossed a serious boundary. If she really hated them that badly she could have at least warned me and I would've taken them to my parents house."
"She didn't think I was being serious, but I didn't talk to her for over 6 hours before she broke down saying she's not gonna go dumpster diving to save some old ugly blankets. I told her that was her choice to make and within the hour she was climbing into the complex dumpster to see if they were still there."
"She walked back in, trash bag in hand and dumped it on the ground while cursing under her breath, rolled her eyes and rushed to the shower. After everything, I was the one that had to dispose of the smelly trash bag and take my blankets to be professionally cleaned."
"Things around the house have been extremely tense in the last few days."
"I confided in my sister who said that what she did was screwed up, but I had taken it way too far by threatening to leave if she didn't climb into a dumpster."
"I really just wanna move past this, but deep down I wanna know if I'm truly in the wrong."
"AITA?"
The OP summed up their situation.
"I told my gf that if she didn't retrieve my blankets from a dumpster, that I would leave at least short term. It's quite possible I stepped over the line."
"I guess I've never directly stated how much they mean to me, but she did know that my grandmother spent months making each one and she herself witnessed how hard losing my grandmother was on me."
Redditors weighed in by declaring:
- NTA - Not The A**hole
- YTA - You're The A**hole
- NAH - No A**holes Here
- ESH - Everyone Sucks Here
Redditors unanimously decided the OP was not the a**hole (NTA).
"NTA, if my partner threw out something from my late grandfather I would not only have them go get it but break up immediately. I'm not telling you to break up with your girlfriend but you need to know that what she did was a massive red flag."
"If she doesn't respect your sentimental items, what else will she not respect of yours? What else would she throw out because she found it 'old and ugly'?" ~ ShyInTheGalaxy
"And on that note, why can't he have something out for decoration, color, or use? Surely using the blankets in the bedroom doesn't disrupt her beige aesthetic too much, and he lives there too."
"I swear, sometimes people take the aesthetic thing way too far. NTA, OP." ~ Mondschatten78
"NTA. OP isn't allowed to have opinions regarding decorations for their shared living space in her opinion."
"OP, this isn't going to get any better. You can try talking this out, but it sounds like she doesn't think she did anything wrong."
"Is that REALLY what you want out of a romantic partner; someone who disrespects your opinions so much they throw away treasured possessions and make jokes about it?" ~ mechwarrior719
"Growing up, my parents painted every wall white and bought only brown furniture. I was dying for some color, but they kept saying, 'what if we want to change the furniture or throw pillows?'."
"Yes, even the throw pillows were brown and beige. Even the exterior of the house was beige."
"Finally, for my 13th birthday, I asked if I could paint my walls, which I then painted blue. After that, my mom realized color wasn't so bad, so she painted a red accent wall in the living room."
"Point is, as humans, I think we need color for our mental well being. NTA, OP." ~ Lady-Seashell-Bikini
"NTA. When I was 21 and away at Uni, my mum and stepdad moved house. My mum threw so many of my childhood things away—mostly stuff that my dad had given me.
"They divorced when I was tiny, but I had a very strong bond with him. I was heartbroken. He passed away when I was 20. I cannot forgive her for it." ~ HotPinkLollyWimple
"NTA. It also sounds like you're a lodger, not living with a partner if you can't have anything with personality out in your supposed 'home'. The GF sounds like a drag."
"I don't understand the beige aesthetic. Just reminds me of every rented place ever. I personally find it ugly and soulless."
"I hope the blankets come back from the cleaner okay." ~ Leigeofgoblins
"I'm going to ask you one thing, OP. Does the place feel like home?"
"If you can't even put some blankets on the bed? A bedroom isn't usually somewhere guests even go."
"Can you even decorate or suggest something you want in the home without her saying 'no' because it doesn't fit the astethic? I would have a talk with her about that."
"Or else down the road, you will be dealing with a home you don't like or feel welcome in. Beige moms/wives is a whole thing on YouTube/tiktok." ~ Dangerous-WinterElf
"NTA. Your relationship could recover from this, but only if she is actually sorry for what she did. Getting them out of the trash is a natural consequence of putting them in the trash."
"If she can't see that, be prepared for a lot of battles with her when she crosses a severe boundary and blames you for the fallout."
"In my opinion, it's not worth it. Hopefully, she can see this."
'l"Your sister is wrong. It is not too much."
"Why should you crawl through the trash when you're not the one that put them there? Unless your sister was saying she would have come over to do it."
"It's tense in the house right now because you took a stand. You described a home where she seems very much in charge and probably thought you would just submit to the mistreatment of having your stuff thrown out."
"You didn't let her get away with it. That's a good thing. Relationships need boundaries. She is processing this boundary."
"She will probably want to breeze past the issue in a day or two. But she needs to acknowledge she was in the wrong. If not, she will walk all over you in the future." ~ gorwraith
"She should have stayed in the dumpster. I lost my grandmother 20 years ago and I'd still lose my sh*t if my partner were so knowingly disrespectful. And for beige? The most boring of all the aesthetics?"
"I am so happy you were able to recover that bag of cozy love from grandma."
"FYI, trash bags aren't a great answer for storing them long term, they can trap moisture, just Google 'quilt storage' and loads of good options pop up. Make sure if you aren't going to display them that you take them out and fold them diffently every so often."
"Store with a preservative to keep out bugs and rodents and read up on laundering a quilt or just always take it to a pro. I'm not trying to lecture, just happen to have some knowledge and want you to be able to feel your granny's hard work and love wrapped around you for the rest of your life." ~ Cultural_Section_862
"NTA. Please, please tell me you are breaking up with this person and moving out."
"It's not about the fact that she threw away something that she might not explicitly have known (though I am very dubious about that) was very precious to you."
"It's about the fact that she doesn't treat you like a full partner or even like an adult human being who is entitled to their own possessions."
"She is controlling and she has no respect for you, your feelings, or your needs. She considers you as merely an accessory to her life, in which she is the main and only character."
"And due to the fact that you moved into a place where she was already living, she regards that place as 'hers' over which she has 100% complete control and say. Your needs and feelings and opinions do not matter to her."
"After all that, she did not even have enough consideration for you to take the blankets and get them cleaned to un-do the damage that she caused."
"I know it sucks to break up and have to start your life over. But I speak from experience when I say that life with this controlling, disrespectful person is not the life that you want."
"If you stay, your life is just going to be more replays of her doing whatever she wants and completely disrespecting and disregarding your feelings." ~ cat-lover76
Throwing away a partner's possessions is rarely a good move. But discarding treasured mementos without remorse is way worse.















Woman Breaks Up With Boyfriend Who Worried People Would Think She Was Trans For Using Stand-To-Pee Device
Content Warning: Transphobia, Transphobic Comments
There are countless different reasons that a relationship might end, and a red flag could arise at any time. Some of these might have been learned in childhood and could improve over time.
Transphobia is absolutely a red flag that should be acted on immediately; however, with no option to fly again, pointed out the members of the "Am I the A**hole?" (AITA) subReddit.
Redditor funnelfuss was in the car with her boyfriend when they got stuck in a traffic jam.
She really needed to use the restroom, so since she had a device with her to make the process easier, she decided she'd step out of the car.
But when her boyfriend panicked and thought people might mistake her for a man, the Original Poster (OP) realized that her boyfriend was not who she thought he was.
She asked the sub:
The OP had to use the restroom while stuck in a traffic jam.
"My (26 Female) boyfriend (25 Male) and I got stuck in an insane traffic jam. My boyfriend was driving."
"We were at a standstill. Found out later on, they had closed the highway."
"I had to pee really bad, like bad bad bad. I saw that a couple guys had run to the side of the road to pee, and I decided to do the same."
"It was super open, with a few bushes by the side of the road, really not much cover."
The OP's boyfriend became uncomfortable when he realized she had a pee-to-stand device.
"I have a stand-to-pee device in my car, but when I grabbed it, my boyfriend got all weird."
"He said people would see me pee standing up and think I was Trans."
"I said no one would think that, plenty of women have pee funnels, and that also I didn't care. I have no beef with Trans people!"
"He said I should squat, just to put his mind at ease."
"I said I didn't want to get my butt and c**ch out on the highway in front of everyone, or get pee on my shoes, and I just wanted to be quick and clean."
"He said he didn't want people to look at the girl he was dating and think she was Trans and that I should squat, like GIRLS do."
The OP decided she was over it.
"I was dying by this point. I couldn't hold it anymore, and I really didn't want to show the world my butt, so I ran to the side of the road and slipped the device into my jeans and just peed standing up with my back to traffic."
"No one could see anything; it just slides through the zipper. But I guess maybe if someone was looking, they would be confused? But also, who's LOOKING?!"
"When I got back to the car, my boyfriend wouldn't talk to me. He says I disrespected his feelings. But it was 100% an emergency, and I don't get what his problem was."
Fellow Redditors weighed in:
Some reassured the OP that there was nothing wrong with using the restroom how she wanted.
"OP, don't think for one more second about this. Your boyfriend is being ridiculous."
"As if you will ever see any of those people again! Plus, holding it in for too long can cause a whole host of issues."
"It's actually genius that you have something like that in your car, just in case. I'm going to order one too now! NTA." - m_alice88
"'Honey, please show all these strangers your c**ch and a** so they know I'm not gay, mmmm'kay?'"
"A weak man, a very weak man." - lefteyedcrow
"You must have a she-wee! Those are so great for women."
"Tell your boyfriend to get over himself. You had to pee. He does not understand that squatting can suck and leave you exposed."
"If he is that upset you did this, rethink this relationship. I would find it hysterical."
"NTA." - Oktodayithink
"NTA, OP. You just needed a makeshift restroom."
"Your boyfriend apparently thought that it was normal for people to stare at strangers who are trying to pee to evaluate who they are, who they're with, and what the status of their relationship is."
"You know, to pass the time while in gridlock traffic." - Pixichixi
"You did nothing wrong, OP! When you have to go, you have to go. It's healthier to go."
"And don't apologize! We're so wired to reduce conflict, even to the point of downplaying how we feel to keep the peace or end the silence. Don't do it."
"It's a him issue. He thinks his feelings on this are more important than your discomfort about showing your naked body on the side of the road. If he can't figure that out for himself and apologize, it would be a dealbreaker for me." - lelawes
Others agreed and pointed out that the ex-boyfriend was very transphobic.
"NTA. Your boyfriend is clearly transphobic. That is 100% on him. And who cares if people think you are Trans?"
"'He said he didn't want people to look at the girl he was dating and think she was Trans.' And you don't want people to think you're dating someone bigoted and hateful." - GreekAmericanDom
"He may not consider himself transphobic ('I don't hate Trans people! I just don't want to be associated with them or have anyone think I'm with a Trans person!'), but he absolutely is, probably with a healthy side helping of homophobia."
"Why would he care, unless a) Trans women are not women in his eyes, or b) it somehow would be emasculating or embarrassing to his ego to be with a Trans woman."
"Also, you're in a traffic jam. Who the f**k is even watching close enough to care, and who of those people matters enough to give two s**ts about what they think."
"Not to mention, he's being weirdly controlling about your behaviors and how they reflect on him in a scenario where arguably he's never going to interact with a single person he's worrying about." - maladicta228
"This post reminds me of the time I got dressed to go to a function. It was a casual gathering. My kid (this was solidly on their father, my ex, as he's gotten insanely bigoted as he's aged) said, 'Mom, you're dressed like a Lesbian.'"
"Me: 'Lesbians have great fashion sense, I'd love to be mistaken for one.'"
"They paused for a second and realized that I truly wasn't dressing for men (despite it being my husband's work function), and that being seen as a lesbian was a good thing. I'm so glad I raised them to think for themselves, and realize that one can be wrong, admit it, and work on being a better person every day. They've never said anything like that since." - baconbitsy
"He's so insecure (and transphobic) that he cares more about what some strangers in a traffic jam might wrongly assume about you (and thereby him) than YOUR needs, comfort, and health."
"He expected you to prioritize his insecurities (feelings) above that and then punished you when you prioritized your health."
"You sure you want to be with someone like that?? NTA." - molotovmerkin
"Your boyfriend is so transphobic that he wants you to expose your genitalia on the side of the road to prove that you're not a Trans woman because he can't stand the idea of a total stranger, in a neighboring car, whom he will never speak to or see ever again, thinking he MIGHT be SHARING A CAR (because the strangers in other cars have no idea that you're dating) with a Trans woman."
"You're NTA, but get a better boyfriend." - HighCsummer
"Literally, you have to be super transphobic to think people in traffic are gonna judge you if your girlfriend is standing to pee. Like come onnnnnn, this is some insane insecurity." - Responsible-Pickle-2
Some pointed out that not only was the ex-boyfriend transphobic, but also controlling.
"This won't be the last time he expects OP to sacrifice things or make her life worse so that she can conform to his ideal of feminine stereotypes and keep up appearances for his fragile masculine ego."
"And that he gave her the silent treatment for not obliging his transphobia and misogyny disguised as 'feelings' is also problematic." - blancamystiere
"He's insecure and transphobic. He also puts his insecurity and transphobia above your comfort."
"NTA, and honestly, you can do better than this specimen." - PetersMapProject
"NTA. Your boyfriend would have preferred for everyone to see your a** and vagina than have a random stranger think his girlfriend is Trans. He would rather you expose yourself for his personal gain."
"Get a better boyfriend." - Amaze-balls-trippen
"The transphobia? The insecurity? And the silent treatment when he doesn't get his way?"
"So many red flags!" - CarolynDesign
"He also puts his insecurity and transphobia above your comfort and safety."
"He would rather you invite unwanted attention and risk by exposing your private parts to the world than have people think he (who most of the onlookers couldn't even see) might be dating a Trans person."
"NTA. OP, he's too insecure, self-centered, and immature to be a good partner to you, given that he's willing to compromise your safety to avoid a single twinge of discomfort. Dump him." - Hari_om_tat_sat
After receiving feedback, the OP was reassured and shared some positive updates.
"UPDATE: Thank you, everyone, for helping me feel sane again!"
"I got quite a few questions about which device I use, and honestly, it's about what fits you best. There are a ton of options. It's what fits you. Check out pStyle, Freshette, and EllaPee."
"I tried peeing standing up in a toilet, and it worked fine. I think my aim was pretty good, but then I saw little droplets on the floor. No thanks, don't need that. Also, it's loud? Awkward."
"But for the outside, it's pretty fun! I drive a lot, that's why it was in my car. Lifesaver."
"Also, I guess in this case it brought out an ugly side of my (ex) boyfriend and clarified some stuff for me. A winner all around."
"And to all the commenters asking, YES, he is an ex-boyfriend now."
"And yes, there were other red flags."
"Ditched the man, kept the pee funnel. Gonna laugh at him every time I pee standing up."
There's no way to imagine just how awkward the rest of the car ride was after using the restroom and returning to the now-silent and very entitled boyfriend, still stuck in a traffic jam.
But fortunately for the OP, she learned something vital about her relationship during a moment that should have been a total non-issue.
By being concerned about this and expecting the OP to prioritize her ex's pride over her comfort, safety, and cleanliness, her ex told her everything she needed to know.