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Neighbor Asks Parents To Keep Their Baby Quite Or Move Rooms, Asks If She’s Wrong For Wanting Peace

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OP, a 28-year-old woman, lives in a typical UK terrace house. Six weeks ago, a couple with a crying baby moved in next door. While OP maintains a polite neighbor relationship, the lack of sound insulation in their shared wall makes the baby’s constant crying disruptive, especially during OP’s work-from-home days. When politely asking the mother to consider moving the baby to another room during work hours, she exploded, claiming OP didn’t understand the challenges of motherhood.

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Despite acknowledging that babies cry, OP sought a resolution due to the impact on her work and colleagues’ comments. Later, the baby’s father, apologizing for the outburst, revealed the mother’s struggle with postpartum depression and the baby’s colic. While the father agreed to discuss the situation with his fiancée, a complete resolution remains uncertain.

OP, 28f, lives in a UK terrace house. Neighbors moved in six weeks ago with a baby, maintaining a polite relationship.

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via Reddit

OP, a quiet neighbor, hears everything from the noisy next-door neighbors due to poor sound insulation in their terrace housing.

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via Reddit

OP faces a constant issue with the next-door baby’s loud crying, affecting work calls and concentration while working from home.

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via Reddit

The baby’s loud cries from the adjacent room disrupt OP’s work, audible even through headphones, leading to comments from clients and colleagues.

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via Reddit

OP politely asked the neighbor to move the crying baby to another room due to the noise. The mother exploded, slamming the door.

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via Reddit

OP is conflicted; while understanding babies cry, the disruptive noise affects work concentration, drawing negative comments. Was OP wrong for asking?

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OP works from home two days a week due to university commitments. The banking job demands a wired connection and privacy, restricting other work locations.

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OP clarifies not complaining about general baby crying disruptions. The issue is specifically during OP’s two work-from-home days, considering noise-canceling headphones.

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OP clarifies owning the house, not renting. Terrace houses, not apartments. Unable to afford a detached house. A dream for now.

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Dad apologizes for fiancée’s outburst due to postpartum depression. OP discusses baby’s colic and requests consideration on work-from-home days.

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Dad, surprised by the noise, apologized for the baby’s loud crying. They acknowledged the issue but weren’t sure about relocating the baby.

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They bonded over our shared love for Rise Against, finding common ground. A positive outcome, considering the circumstances, for OP.

via Reddit

Now that you have read the story, it’s time for you to see what Redditors had to say about this. Read till the end to see what are other people’s opinions on this. Don’t forget to share your own opinion at the end of this article.

Work and peace matter.

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Your work and concentration are affected, and you approached the situation with understanding and a desire for compromise.

Your need for a quiet work environment is legitimate.

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One can be gentle.

True.

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OP’s request for consideration is valid.

Hope the mother understands it too.

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What are your thoughts on this story? What would you do, or how would you react if you were in OP’s position? You know that your feedback means a lot to us; therefore, we want you to share your thoughts in the comment section below. For more such articles, keep visiting Defused. Have a nice day!

Cat tax

“Not amused by the cat noises coming from my phone.”

via Reddit

 

 

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