Neighbours Moan

Neighbours Moan




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Neighbours Moan
OF-FENCE My neighbours are threatening legal action after I painted fence - it's so petty
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IN an ideal world, we'd all be best mates with our neighbours and rely on them to take in our parcels, water our plants and look after our pets at the drop of hat.
But in our experience, you're lucky if you get a shy nod whenever you pass them in the street.
That said, we'd take that kind of awkwardness over this woman's nightmare relationship with her neighbours ANY day.
Sharing her dilemma on Reddit , the anonymous poster explained how she's recently contracted Covid and baths are the only thing that are soothing her sore throat.
She wrote: "I don’t take baths often but for the past few days I have.
"I tested positive for Covid and my throat is absolutely killing me and taking a bath with eucalyptus salts have been helping."
However the moment the woman starts running the tap, she claims her neighbours start furiously banging on their walls to get her to turn it off.
Explaining how it's making life hell, she added: " Whenever I take a bath they bang on the wall as a signal for me to get out.
Not exactly the relaxing time in the tub she was hoping for, right?
Fast forward to yesterday when the woman wanted to have a soak first thing in the morning - but was terrified of the wrath of her neighbours.
She added: "It’s 7am. I haven’t slept all night from the pain in my throat and I want to take a bath but I’m going back and forth between just suffering a few more hours until it’s not so early."
Asking what she should do, she wrote: "Should I bang back? Or knock on their door and guilt trip / scare them with my Covid?"
Unsurprisingly, the majority of members urged the woman to stick up for herself and give her neighbours a taste of their own medicine.
One wrote: "Bang back. Call the landlord, explain the situation, and inform them that you expect this to stop immediately.
"They need to pass that on to your neighbours ASAP and confirm with you once they've relayed the message."
Another added: "Please tell your landlord.
"You have a right to take a bath and your neighbours are being SO inappropriate. Record the sound regardless and get some opinions."
Meanwhile, a third said: "7am is not an unreasonable time to take a bath or shower. Neither is 11pm. Ignore them."
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COUPLES having noisy nookie sparked at least 168 moans from neighbours last year.
Some disputes about roaring romps and boisterous bonking lasted so long that authorities fitted recording equipment to assess.
But the true number of cases is likely much higher as most councils do not separate a rumpy-pumpy rumpus from other general noise complaints.
Details revealed under a Freedom of Information request show one person complained to Warwick Council that their neighbours could be seen and heard love-making in their kitchen with the window open and the lights on.
Another said their life was blighted by the racket from locals getting it on for more than two years.
In Hull, neighbours going at it in a outdoor blow-up hot tub caused a complaint.
Sutton Council, in South London, had a total of four cases including one where a neighbour said: “The couple have windows wide open. We are being woken up in the middle of the night/early in the morning.
“Basically, they are screaming when having sex.”
In Wakefield, West Yorks, one person moaned of a “loud sex noise with the bedroom window open so all the street can hear”.
Another complaint to the same council was about two or three sex sessions a night with the headboard banging against the wall.
And Pendle Council, Lancs, had a complaint of “extremely loud” moaning, groaning and screaming”.
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©News Group Newspapers Limited in England No. 679215 Registered office: 1 London Bridge Street, London, SE1 9GF. "The Sun", "Sun", "Sun Online" are registered trademarks or trade names of News Group Newspapers Limited. This service is provided on News Group Newspapers' Limited's Standard Terms and Conditions in accordance with our Privacy & Cookie Policy . To inquire about a licence to reproduce material, visit our Syndication site. View our online Press Pack. For other inquiries, Contact Us . To see all content on The Sun, please use the Site Map. The Sun website is regulated by the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO)
Our journalists strive for accuracy but on occasion we make mistakes. For further details of our complaints policy and to make a complaint please click this link: thesun.co.uk/editorial-complaints/

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COUPLES having noisy nookie sparked at least 168 moans from neighbours last year.
Some disputes about roaring romps and boisterous bonking lasted so long that authorities fitted recording equipment to assess.
But the true number of cases is likely much higher as most councils do not separate a rumpy-pumpy rumpus from other general noise complaints.
Details revealed under a Freedom of Information request show one person complained to Warwick Council that their neighbours could be seen and heard love-making in their kitchen with the window open and the lights on.
Another said their life was blighted by the racket from locals getting it on for more than two years.
In Hull, neighbours going at it in a outdoor blow-up hot tub caused a complaint.
Sutton Council, in South London, had a total of four cases including one where a neighbour said: “The couple have windows wide open. We are being woken up in the middle of the night/early in the morning.
“Basically, they are screaming when having sex.”
In Wakefield, West Yorks, one person moaned of a “loud sex noise with the bedroom window open so all the street can hear”.
Another complaint to the same council was about two or three sex sessions a night with the headboard banging against the wall.
And Pendle Council, Lancs, had a complaint of “extremely loud” moaning, groaning and screaming”.
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