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We all go to sleep and we begin to hear the squeak: squeak: squeak of bed springs. I smiled and didn’t say anything to my girl but then it went on for lIke 45 minutes straight with no letup.
being kinda uncomfortable my girlfriend and I started giggling and laughing knowing what was going on.
Next morning we walked upstairs somewhat sheepishly for breakfast. Right off the bat the wife goes “I hope Kyle (their very young son) didn’t keep you awake last night. He has a terrible time falling asleep and can jump around in his crib / bed forever”.
We both lost it and had to explain to our hosts what we thought was going on.
😂😂😂.
#3

I know the couple and am cool with the guy so it didnt bother me much since it was a decent hour. I saw him in our building’s gym a few days later and told him that I needed some of his stamina tips- he looked confused and I told him that I heard him getting it on over the weekend and that I was sure his girl would never leave him after how she sounded.
He then said he was out of town for work over the weekend. My heart sank to my stomach. She moved out shortly after and he just looked like such a sad person after that. Every time I think about how bad I feel for him, I don’t regret telling him- I would want to know. I hope he’s doing good, he moved out months later.
Recently, a thread appeared in the AskReddit community, the author of which, the user u/PreferenceRoutine531, asked netizens: "People who live in apartment buildings: what's the most unexpected thing you've accidentally seen through a neighbor's window?" It might seem like an unusual question, but the thread has collected many truly interesting and exciting stories.
From funny to piquant, and from sad to downright silly - please feel free to enjoy this dedicated selection of almost thirty tales we've compiled for you based on this thread!
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People love to 'spy' on other people, and this inclination of ours has actually found reflection in many works of world culture. Attempts to satisfy our curiosity by learning how others live have actually always existed - even thousands of years before humans invented windows for their homes.
From a fleeting glance while walking down the street to experimental avant-garde movies like Andy Warhol's famous "Empire." Then, in 1964, the prominent visionary of modern art and his friends climbed to the 44th floor of the Time Life Building in NYC, set up a camera, and filmed the Empire State Building across the street for six hours and 40 minutes.
Warhol himself described the film's central idea as "an attempt to understand the flow of time," but such works of art are, in fact, incredibly multilayered. So, throughout the film's nearly seven hours, you can occasionally catch glimpses of people doing their jobs in offices, totally unaware that they're being watched by a camera.
#7

Felt kind of sorry for it because it didn’t look like a very large apartment.
#8

I was just taking my trash out, and there was a sound I didn't recognize. I turn to look, and there were goats in my neighbor's apartment. She was rather baffled when I asked about her hircine guest a few days later. Turns out, Her BF had rented a bunch of goats to play a prank of his best friend. He felt bad leaving the goats in the truck, so he brought them in the apartment for a few hours, until he packed them back up and drove them away to do the prank, without telling my neighbor.
#9

Incidentally, sociological surveys clearly confirm that many nations consider peering through others' windows a national sport. For example, this dedicated article at Shutters describes one such survey, wittily called "Nosy Nation," which was conducted among the British.
According to the survey, more than half of Britons admit to regular window-watching. Moreover, 35% have seen something strange or unexpected, 33% admit to catching a naked neighbor or something bizarre by accident, and 29% have even responded to an incident seen through the window.
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In fact, some sociologists generally tend to view windows as a type of media. Like smartphone screens, existing long before smartphones were invented. "The characteristic of a window as media is that it connects the inside with the outside via the eye while physically separating the inside from the outside," this article on the Window Research Institute website quotes sociologist Georg Simmel.
Of course, now that we devote almost the lion's share of our attention to our smartphones (4 hours and 37 minutes per day, according to this study, shared by Exploding Topics), we've become less likely to look through any windows. But still, from time to time, we get our eyes off this endless carousel of reels, TikToks, and texts - and see something no less captivating in a neighboring window.
#13

Same kid took all the fire extinguishers in the building and sprayed them into the stairwell.
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To this day one of us will randomly blurt out "I AIN'T NEVER GONE TO BED!" and both break out laughing.
You know, we're almost certain you've also seen something worth sharing through the window. So after you read these stories collected by us, maybe you'd feel free to tell us your own tale in the comments below. And please don't forget to keep a closer eye out when you're walking down the street - maybe something interesting is already happening there.
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