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Her Parents Refuse To Give Her And Her Twin Sister Their Own Bedrooms Even Though They Live In A Four-Bedroom House With Separate Guest And Office Rooms That Are Barely Used

Every time, though, her mom would yell at Kate– because her mom keeps her craft stuff in the guest room closet and would make comments like, “What if grandma has to stay with us for a while?”

So, she and her sister have been left trying to live in a space that they have outgrown. She claims that their stuff barely fits in there anymore.

The closet cannot hold all of their clothes, and Kate’s books are kept in stacks on the floor. Even her friends ask why she and Kate are still sleeping in bunkbeds when they live in a four-bedroom house.

“And I love my sister, but this is making me like her less, and sometimes I think she barely tolerates me because we are always in each other’s space,” she revealed.

Just a few days ago, she and her sister got into yet another argument, too. It all began when she was looking for her hair curler and accidentally caused a “book avalanche,” which ultimately knocked Kate’s lego set off the desk.

This immediately prompted a screaming match before both she and her sister asked their parents “for the thousandth time” to combine the guestroom and office. That way, she and Kate would each be able to have their own space.

Her dad was quick to turn that one down, though, and claimed that he “absolutely” needed an office. But, she snapped back about how she “absolutely” needed a closet and pointed out how stuffing she and Kate in one room while they had so much space just made no sense.

Then, her mom joined the argument and ended up taking her dad’s side. Her mom claimed that she and Kate were not “entitled” to their own rooms and brought up how millions of children still share rooms around the globe.

On top of that, her mom advised them to get rid of some stuff and “stop living like hoarders” if they wanted more space in their bedroom.

All of that really ticked her off, though, and she proceeded to ask her mom who was entitled to a guest room that is empty three hundred and forty-six days every year and, likewise, an office that is only used twice a week.

She also asked why she was the unreasonable one for wanting some adequate living space.

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