Relative thinks my house is ‘too loud’
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
What makes it stranger is the way it is handled. No conversation, no quick “hey, I’m sensitive to noise,” no attempt to problem-solve. Instead, silent exits, expensive hotel stays, and then a phone call from her father acting as middle management in a conflict no one else knew existed. By the time the homeowner even hears about the issue, it has already escalated into something dramatic and oddly formal.
That escalation is what shifts this from mildly annoying to genuinely baffling. There are about a dozen normal steps between “the dishwasher is loud” and “I have relocated myself to a hotel and looped in a parent.” Skipping all of them suggests the problem is not really the dishwasher.
The homeowner is left in an awkward position. She offered a favor with no strict deadline, and now finds herself hosting someone who treats ordinary household noise like a crisis but will not address it directly. Wanting her out is not unreasonable at this point. The real challenge is figuring out how to say that without turning a strange situation into a full family drama, especially when it is becoming increasingly clear that whatever is going on here has very little to do with how loud the house actually is.
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