AITA for telling my neighbor that I’d do what she asked, but I’d let people know why?

What would you do if a harmless hobby you started during a tough time suddenly put you at odds with a neighbor? Many people enjoy small creative projects that brighten the neighborhood, especially when days feel long and monotonous.

But when those little joys bump up against official rules, things can turn awkward fast. One person found themselves in exactly that spot after a neighbor pointed out a violation — and their response sparked debate about fairness, pettiness, and standing up for yourself.

‘AITA for telling my neighbor that I’d do what she asked, but I’d let people know why?’

The story starts with a creative way to beat quarantine boredom.

So throughout quarantine I've been pretty unemployed bored so a few months ago I started dressing up some halloween skeletons in different outfits and setting up little scenes in my...

A few of my neighbors have complimented it and the little kids in the neighborhood love it. It is technically against our HOA rules to have halloween decorations up this...

Things took a turn when one neighbor decided to speak up directly.

Last week, my neighbor a few doors down brought up the HOA regulation, implying that she would report me if I didn't stop putting up my decorations.

I told her that I would take them down, but "I would let anyone who asked why I took them down exactly why I did it" She just kind of...

Even after the exchange, the decorations stayed up — and now doubt has crept in.

I kept the decorations up, but I'm worried she'll report me and I'll a fine. My GF said that she was right and it is against the rules, which is...

The core conflict here centers on a small creative outlet clashing with community rules. One side sees innocent fun that brings smiles to kids and neighbors during difficult months. The other side values consistency and the shared standards everyone agreed to follow when moving in. Both emotions — desire for joy and desire for order — are valid, which is why the disagreement escalated quickly instead of staying calm.

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The original poster feels proud of the positive attention the skeletons receive and resents being singled out when the HOA usually stays quiet. At the same time, the neighbor likely feels frustrated that someone openly ignores a rule she respects, especially after taking the step to address it face-to-face rather than reporting silently. The failure happened in communication: the promise to remove the decorations was given but not kept, and the follow-up statement felt like a public call-out.

Family therapist and conflict resolution expert Dr. Harriet Lerner has written that “When we make a promise or agreement, even a small one, keeping our word builds trust — breaking it, even with justification, erodes the foundation of neighborly respect.” This idea fits perfectly here, as the initial assurance followed by inaction left both parties feeling dismissed.

The most practical path forward involves clear boundaries and honest reflection. Take the decorations down for now to honor the rule you agreed to follow. At the same time, consider starting a friendly conversation with other neighbors about possibly updating the HOA guidelines to allow more year-round creativity. Small, calm steps like these prevent resentment from building and give everyone room to feel heard.

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Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Reactions online split sharply, with some readers cheering the creative spirit and others defending the importance of following agreed-upon rules. The debate quickly turned into a classic clash between individual freedom and neighborhood standards.

Many readers strongly supported the original poster and saw the neighbor’s approach as petty:

sadbeanwithdreams − NTA maybe put the skeletons in a vaguely current-holiday related? Like April has Easter, arbor day and earth day. Then you have a solid and even community-building reason...

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SeaFaringMatador − NTA. If someone is gonna complain and/or make a vague threat then they have to own up to it, not hide behind anonymity.

Exiled_From_Twitter − NTA f__k HOA rules (I live in one too, they're uppity pricks who create arbitrary stupid rules). But beyond that point, no it's perfectly fine to tell other...

They shouldn't complain if they don't want to be outed for it. Also they're not Halloween decorations, you are repurposing then as lawn decor.

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Just beat them up with semantics. Clearly you're not decorating for Halloween so obviously it can't be considered that.

PurpyPops − Land of the free, where you can't even decorate your own front yard to bring people joy during a pandemic 🤔

PeaDramatic1541 − Nta,i would put them in my window with a huge spotlight.

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Others felt the original poster was clearly in the wrong for breaking the rules and then failing to follow through:

[Reddit User] − Mate, you are breaking neighborhood rules. It's okay if no one complains but someone has.

Even if it is only one person you have to respect that because they have bought a property with the same restrictions. Also respect that they have asked nicely first...

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Love_Fashioned − YTA. You live in a place that has rules against the sort of thing you are doing. You wrote that you are worried that someone will report you.

And yet . . . you continue to break the rule and on top of that are threatening someone who wishes to have that rule enforced.

People live in HOA's because they like the quality of the neighborhood and the stability of those rules. Yes, some people may have complimented you,

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but, you might be surprised at how many people applaud your neighbor and will be happy to see the out of season decorations disappear.

At this point in the whole scheme of things - most people want life to get back to normal and not be cluttered up with decorations that don't make sense...

In my own regular neighborhood I'd be annoyed but would accept that people can do whatever they want on their property. If I opted to live in a HOA ruled...

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GamerKnight11112 − YTA Purposefully brealing rules and then threatening the lady who wants you to folllow them A lot of people here are saying N T A because f__k hoas...

kelcity − YTA. You admitted it is in fact against the rules you agreed to when you moved there. I think she was giving you an opportunity to take them...

seregil42 − Ugh, I hate HOA's. With that said, I have to go with a slight YTA. You said you'd take them down and you didn't. Personally, I wouldn't care...

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but someone is within their rights to request you to take them down and you said you would. Had you taken them down after the request (even with telling people...

geven87 − yta. not for the decorations, but for lying to her. "I told her that I would take them down, but . .. I kept the decorations up"

A few voices landed in the middle, pointing out faults on both sides:

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featt − Your response was pretty passive-aggressive. You're kind of threatening to turn the neighbors against her. Although it sounds like she was being snippy herself, she did have a...

Since you acknowledged her complaint, still didn't take the skellies down, and therefore are refusing to follow the HOA rules you agreed to, it's a gentle YTA.

But I agree she's k__ling the buzz which sucks. As someone else said, making them seasonally appropriate could be a nice way to circumvent the issue!

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vestimentiferever − ESH verging on YTA If it’s against HOA you’re violating the front yard decoration guide you agreed to. Neighbor sucks for threatening you instead of just taking action...

Sorry but you might be getting compliments from ten people but twenty are muttering under their breath about how they’re going to report you and she’s the only one who...

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1) lobby to change the rules 2) take them down 3) accept people will say you’re breaking the rules I don’t understand why it’s such a big deal to you...

when you said yourself you knew you were doing that She didn’t tear them down or anything. Just told you a fact.

RustyUK333 − NTA, but you really need to choose the hills you die on. P. S. This isnt one.

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pickledshallots − America. .. where you can’t buy a kinder egg or decorate your lawn, but you get a gun as a free gift when you join a new bank!

This situation shows how quickly a fun, harmless idea can stir up tension when rules and personal feelings collide. It reminds us that living in a community often means balancing what brings us joy with the agreements we all accepted — and that keeping your word, even on small things, matters more than we sometimes realize.

Would you quietly take the decorations down to avoid trouble, or would you keep them up and explain your side to anyone who asks? Have you ever dealt with an HOA rule that felt pointless — and how did you handle it?

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