Imagine offering your sunny balcony as a mini herbarium for neighbors and then finding yourself trapped under a jungle of oversized succulents. That was the reality for one Redditor, whose good-natured offer turned into a turf war.
After repeatedly warning and waiting, they finally let the plants die and laid the wilted remains at the neighbor’s doorstep. Now everyone’s asking: Was it boundary or burn-out?
A Redditor allowed her neighbor to place plants on her sunny apartment deck but set a limit when Jenna’s large plants crowded the space













OP later edited the post








Source: downriverrowing
Therapist and boundary expert Juliane Taylor Shore (cited in Time) emphasizes that “boundaries help protect personal space… avoiding emotional distress” and are central to maintaining peace in shared living situations. When neighbors overstep, especially repeatedlyit’s healthy (and sometimes necessary) to reinforce limits.
Dr. Meghan Marcum, via Verywell Mind, underscores how respecting others’ boundaries shows care and builds trust, and that consistently crossing those lines harms relationships.
Still, letting a living thing die when you could have easily returned it alive is where the “proportionality line” becomes blurry. A psychology principle reminds us that while you can refuse to water a plant, actively celebrating its neglect edges into spite.
Modern psychology also highlights the value of shared altruism, the idea that giving others something meaningful improves social bonds and fosters well-being for everyone involved. The tenant’s frustration might have been valid, but the opportunity to return the plants alive could have shifted this from pettiness to peacekeeping.
For many, this becomes a lesson in managing emotional friction, not hiding behind omission or neglect, but resolving conflict with a level head and a clear “here’s what’s okay,” not just “this is final.”
Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:
These Redditors vote OP is not wrong, praising OP’s warnings and slamming Jenna’s entitlement for demanding deck space














These users claim everyone in this story is wrong, noting Jenna’s rudeness but criticizing OP’s petty plant-killing and doorstep dump






Gardening your boundaries means dealing with both the soil and the sneers. In this case, the tenant enforced their space, but planted a root of social discomfort in the process. What might’ve started as neighborly generosity ended in silent grudge and a garden of regrets. Were the actions justified? Or did the response wilt into pettiness?
Tell us: Would you have let the plants die or rescued them into greener pastures?









