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Worst Roommate Ever - Janice Griffith May 2026

Privacy is a foreign concept to Janice. To her, what is yours is hers. You come home to find her using your expensive skincare, and when you confront her, she hits you with the classic gaslight: "Oh my god, relax, it was just a little bit. Why are you being so stingy?"

But it goes beyond products. Janice invites her boyfriend, "Chad," over constantly. He eats your food, hogs the TV, and essentially lives there rent-free. When you try to discuss the "guest policy" in the lease, Janice flips the script. "You’re just jealous because you’re single," she’ll snap, turning a logical conversation about bills into a personal attack on your love life.

At this point, you might think it can’t get worse. You’d be wrong. Because the title of the worst roommate ever requires a level of audacity that borders on supervillainy.

Megan started receiving credit card statements for cards she never opened. A department store card. A gas station card. And then, a $3,000 balance at a petting zoo (presumably for Squiggles the goat’s grooming needs). Worst roommate ever - Janice Griffith

It was Janice. Of course it was Janice. She had taken Megan’s mail, used her social security number (which she found in an unlocked drawer during a “cleaning spree”), and opened six lines of credit. When the police arrived, Janice’s defense was: “We’re basically family. What’s mine is mine, and what’s hers is also mine. That’s just math.”

If you take one thing from this cautionary tale, let it be these hard-won lessons:

The breaking point happened on a Tuesday. I came home to find Janice had rearranged my bedroom as a “surprise.” My bed was now in the kitchen. My desk was in the bathroom. My clothes were draped over the fire escape. Privacy is a foreign concept to Janice

“I felt like your space lacked flow,” she explained.

I packed a bag and stayed at a friend’s house for three days. When I returned, she’d moved a drum set into the hallway and adopted a guinea pig named “Finance Bro.”

Perhaps the most damaging aspect of living with Janice is her reckless disregard for the property. Whether it’s spilling red wine on the beige carpet or clogging the disposal with potato peels, disasters follow her. Why are you being so stingy

The worst part isn't the accident; it’s the cover-up. Janice will spill wine and simply flip the rug over to hide the stain. She will break a vase and superglue it back together hoping you won't notice. When the landlord inevitably finds the damage, Janice is the first to throw you under the bus. "I told her not to do that," she’ll say, pointing a manicured finger directly at you.

Evicting Janice took two months, three certified letters, and one emotional breakdown in a Target parking lot. The day she left, she took my blender, my toaster, and one of my socks.

But she left behind a note: “Thanks for the memories. You were a great roommate. Mostly.”

We’ve all had bad roommates. The one who leaves dishes in the sink for weeks. The one who “borrows” your clothes without asking. But Janice Griffith? She didn’t just cross lines—she pole-vaulted over them while setting my living room on fire (literally).

Let me take you back to what I thought would be the best year of my life.