For three years, they’ve called this old, creaky apartment home—a place filled with memories and the persistent groans of a thin floor that echoes every careful step. Despite their efforts to tread lightly and respect the quiet below, the relentless noise of their lives is met with pounding, a harsh reminder that peace is fragile and easily shattered.
When a new neighbor moved in downstairs, suspicion replaced understanding. Every simple sound—a closing door, a vacuum’s hum, a dog’s chew—became a trigger for her angry banging, turning their sanctuary into a minefield of tension. What was meant to be a shared space of calm has become a battlefield of silent frustrations and unspoken resentments.

Downstairs neighbor demands we ‘walk normal’. So we do. And she HATES it.



















As noted by Dr. Albert Mehrabian, a communication expert, much of how a message is received depends on nonverbal cues and tone. In this scenario, the neighbor’s communication method—banging on the floor with a broom—is aggressive and passive-aggressive, immediately setting a hostile tone that overrides any attempt at polite dialogue from the upstairs residents. This action signals high emotional distress and a breakdown in civil communication protocols.
The core conflict here involves differing perceptions of ‘normal’ living noise within shared housing, exacerbated by poor building acoustics. The original poster (OP) has demonstrated an effort to mitigate noise, indicating respect for community living. However, the downstairs neighbor appears to be operating under an inflexible standard, possibly due to high personal stress (as mentioned regarding her job) or an unrealistic expectation for a twenty-year-old building with thin floors. The neighbor’s escalation from banging to face-to-face confrontation shows a failure to manage internal emotional triggers, projecting that stress onto external, unavoidable environmental factors like creaking floors.
The OP’s final decision to disregard further attempts at noise mitigation and focus on the move-out date is an understandable coping mechanism when faced with an unreasonable party. However, a more constructive approach in these situations, prior to reaching the breaking point, involves formalizing communication. Instead of agreeing to ‘walk normally’ (a vague standard), the OP could have suggested a mediation attempt or formally documenting the existing noise issues (e.g., pointing out the age of the floors) to management if they had a longer tenancy. For future situations, establishing clear, measurable boundaries early on, perhaps via a polite written note referencing the floor noise, can sometimes preempt aggressive escalation.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.

![[deleted] ... is a 20 years old building really considered...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/b08e41e8f0680f03b8d801a2d3a98d97.png)







![[deleted] Sorry, you have an old building which is 20...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/72e983dfd34675a7e50a1407485bdfd1.png)
The original poster and their spouse felt they were already acting with significant courtesy regarding noise, struggling to balance normal living activities with the demands of a new, highly sensitive downstairs neighbor. Despite agreeing to walk ‘normally,’ which they believed they were already doing, the conflict persisted, leading to frustration and a sense of helplessness over external control.
Given that the poster is moving soon, the immediate conflict may resolve itself, but the core issue remains: How should residents balance their right to normal habitation within a structurally flawed living space against a neighbor’s reasonable expectation of quiet enjoyment? Where does personal responsibility end and building management/structural fault begin in determining acceptable noise levels?







