AITA for requesting my next door neighbour to make her toddler stop crying?

What happens when everyday noises from next door start invading your professional life? A woman working from home faced this exact dilemma after her neighbor’s toddler began shrieking multiple times a day, disrupting critical calls and even prompting clients to assume the child was hers.

Most assume they’d handle such frustrations calmly by addressing the source directly. Yet in practice, a polite conversation escalated into tears and defensiveness, leaving everyone involved questioning their approach to shared living spaces.

‘AITA for requesting my next door neighbour to make her toddler stop crying?’

The situation builds from ongoing disturbances in a shared building.

I 36f live next door to new tenants who moved in some 6 months ago and they have a toddler 2/3 years in age. He shrieks at all times of...

Due to the hybrid work model, I work from home 3 days a week. It’s become a regular occurrence to have multiple instances of managers/clients asking why there is a...

(CONTEXT : Last Saturday the whole building woke up at 5:45 in the morning because the child was screaming and it went on for a good 20 minutes.). INFO:. -...

There is no n__lect. The child is well looked after. He looks about 3 years old and goes to a play school in the mornings. But hasn’t been going this...

Tensions peaked during a high-stakes workday with constant interruptions.

I’m working on something critical while handing off my responsibilities due to a transition and have back to back calls. Over the course of 4 hours I had to keep...

At one point, an important client (in another continent) asked me if I needed to be excused to take care of my child, I should reschedule the call. Another person...

Apologised to them and informed them that that was my neighbours child. They mentioned how it sounds like it’s happening in my house. After the call ended I went out...

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I asked her again if the baby is unwell, she said no. She mentioned she took away something that he was trying to eat and that’s why he was crying....

I asked her if I didn’t talk to the child’s mother who else do I speak to? Explained to her that I completely understand the challenges of being a mother...

(He’s loudly crying as I type this. Took a voice recording but don’t think there’s a way for me to attach it). Please advice. I’m ready to be judged. If...

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EDIT: A lot of folks are asking me to go to the office. Most tech companies have globally changed their policies to 100% remote work or some combination of hybrid...

Saw a few folks asking me to move. We have a lease till May 2024. And this location is accessible to my offices. (Had written this in one of my...

A ton of folks are fixated on the idea that I haven’t been using a headset. I used to use earphones (AirPods specifically) until I had surgery on my upper...

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So, ofcourse it’s not advisable and honestly painful to plug in earphone’s. Been dealing with quite a bit of sound sensitivity.

The core conflict stems from unavoidable toddler noise clashing with remote work demands in thin-walled apartments. The poster sought quiet for professional focus, while the mother defended her child’s natural behavior during a tantrum. Frustration escalated because the noise affected the poster’s job performance and building peace, triggering defensiveness over parenting judgments.

The poster driven by work stress and empathy attempts feared ongoing disruptions and client misperceptions. The mother, likely overwhelmed as a stay-at-home parent, reacted with tears from exhaustion and perceived criticism. Communication broke down as the poster explained impacts without solutions, and the mother felt attacked rather than supported.

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Family therapist Dr. Laura Markham explains in her book Peaceful Parent, Happy Kids that “Toddlers tantrum because their brains are still developing impulse control, and consistent limits with empathy help them learn” (Dr. Laura Markham, 2012). This applies directly—the mother’s firm boundary caused the outburst, yet without neighbor collaboration, both sides suffered unnecessary strain on trust and daily life.

To resolve, the poster could invest in white noise machines or wall soundproofing panels on her side. Schedule a calm follow-up chat offering mutual ideas, like closing windows during calls. The mother might explore toddler playgroups for outlets. Both could document issues to building management for insulation checks, starting with small apologies to rebuild neighborly rapport.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

Social media users weighed in on this noisy neighbor standoff, splitting opinions on fault, solutions, and realism in apartment living. Debates raged over personal responsibility versus shared spaces, with practical tips emerging amid the judgments.

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Several commenters saw no assholes here and focused on tech fixes for the work side.

Specific-Size4601 − NAH Horrible situation. I really suggest buying a decent headset which will reduce background noise and checking your Teams settings. I’m in a flat and had builders hammering...

It was a nightmare for me to concentrate through but no one on my call heard a peep. That was with a decent Jabra wireless set - maybe worth £75....

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otsukaren_613 − I'm gonna lean to NAH, but this isn't something you need to be involving yourself with. Tell the landlord, it's up to them to enforce solutions to noise...

And, that way it's documented, and if other people complain, it can be dealt with more directly. Also, having said that, it ISN'T that normal. Kids are loud, and yeah,...

but not constantly...unless something's wrong. And that reaction says Mom KNOWS it is a problem, but doesn't know what to do. If she had it under control, she'd be apologetic.

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PurpleMarsAlien − NAH When you have a toddler, you're damned if you do and damned if you don't. If you give in to a temper tantrum, you're told you're creating...

A wave of support went to the original poster, calling the noise excessive and urging official channels.

QuinGood − NTA Contact building management/landlord. Ask if they can install soundproofing in the apartment of the unhappy toddler. Tell them why and let them take care of it. Ask...

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[Reddit User] − NTA But a 2/3 year old constantly screaming, there has to be something wrong.

NeverNuked − NTA, I love how everyone is complaining about you not having proper noise canceling headphones, but no-one mentions the very early morning wake-up scream that even woke the...

You're entitled to a reasonable amount of peace in your own home but this sounds excessive to what another person is expected to bear.

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We can't abdicate the responsibility of bringing up our children to other people and living within your own space physically and environmentally, you can't expect someone else just to suck...

Wether or not this child has a physical or mental issue really is not your problem (which a lot of people feel is harsh, but true), noise whatever it's cause...

A child's screaming in fact messes with our programming even more because biologically we react more to it, especially women. But it really is building management's issue. When it comes...

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Criticism targeted the poster for lacking equipment or approaching the mom directly, labeling her the asshole.

Fit-Importance-4946 − Sorry man, this is just a part of living in an apartment building. Sometimes you pull the shortest straw and end up next to a family with children.

Cookiescookiescooki − You are NTA and neither is the mom. She’s likely super stressed . Lots of toddlers cry and this one sounds like they cry louder and more than...

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It’s not her fault , can’t make the toddler stop crying - I mean the more one try the louder and longer it gets. The apartment is the a__hole here.

Cheaply made apartments with no thought to being real homes, just income producing boxes. I have lived in apartments all my life next to families etc and never had to...

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GlitteringHappily − I would have said N A H but honestly YTA based on the comment that you use your laptop audio and no headset. How have you not considered...

no-onwerty − Info - what magic powers do you think this child’s mom has to make their 2 year old stop crying. Toddlers are NOT little adults. One cannot go...

Balanced or additional no-asshole views emphasized toddler realities and mutual adaptations.

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[Reddit User] − NAH - you have every right to be frustrated And also some kids are like this for a while- they may have developmental issues or something but...

The mom is in her home with her child, she’s doing her best, she likely hates the crying just as much as everyone else.

ladyhalibutlee − NAH because I understand it’s irritating as hell to be listening to that. Thing is, I doubt very much that she isn’t trying to stop it. Some kids...

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And you have no actual ability to assess the health of the child. My youngest was very much this way (after having two kids who were very quiet! ). If...

But she actually had critical heart defects and is awaiting autism assessment. I probably wouldn’t share this information with a neighbour who I felt was judging me when I’m probably...

And obviously with a kid that young, it could just as easily be a more loud version of normal development. That woman is exhausted AF, trust me. Is there another...

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EquivalentTwo1 − NAH. You need headphones with a mic. You also need to mute yourself unless you are talking. I live near an airfield and wear heaphones when working from...

On the handful of calls I've been on, if the other people leave their mikes live, the static from them makes me nuts. The child is being a child.Eventually they...

But it is impacting your work and your solution was not to limit your exposure (headphones) and go straight to the mother, who is very aware her kid is crying...

Hang some tapestries to help with noise control between the flats, close your window when working. I would probably still contact your landlord because one child crying should be heard...

[Reddit User] − NAH but what software are you using to make your video calls? We use Teams and there are different settings to block out background noise.

We've been having our house rewired whilst I've been working from home and nobody has noticed any of the horrendous noise. Most similar software has this capability, you just need...

fizzbangwhiz − YTA. Do you think the mother enjoys hearing her child cry? Do you genuinely believe she is capable of keeping him quiet but just chooses not to because...

You could ask her to see if there's anything she can think of to mitigate the impact on you, like if her windows are open a lot you could ask...

But she obviously knows her kid is loud and she's annoyed by it too, I guarantee. You weren't telling her anything new or giving her any useful input by just...

It's on you to do what you can to mitigate the impact on you and your work. Why don't you have a headset for calls? A decent pair of headphones...

Get some soundproofing for your side of the walls and put up some felt wall tiles or rugs. Otherwise. .....welcome to city living. Save up for a single family home...

This tale underscores how thin walls amplify small conflicts into emotional standoffs. Apartment dwellers learn that toddler tantrums test patience, but proactive steps like noise-canceling tools or landlord involvement preserve sanity without blame. Empathy for parenting struggles pairs with boundaries for work focus, reminding everyone that shared spaces demand compromise.

Would you confront a noisy neighbor directly or handle it through management first? In hybrid work eras, how much noise should one tolerate at home before pushing back?

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