Small favors between neighbors are normal. Most of the time, they’re harmless, quick, and built on trust.
For one woman working from home, what started as a simple act of kindness slowly turned into something she never agreed to: becoming her neighbor’s unofficial package receiver.
At first, it was just an occasional delivery. A single box here and there, no problem at all. ‘
But over time, the requests multiplied, the coordination disappeared, and the responsibility quietly shifted onto her without warning.
By the time she tried to stop it, it already felt like an expectation rather than a favor.
And when she finally said “no,” the backlash came immediately.

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The woman explained that she works from home, which naturally makes her available when delivery drivers come by during the day.
A few months ago, her neighbor asked if she could accept a package while she was out.
It seemed simple enough.
She agreed.
In the beginning, everything was reasonable. A package every couple of weeks, a quick handoff at the door, nothing that disrupted her day or space.
But gradually, the pattern changed.
What started as an occasional favor turned into multiple deliveries per week. Some days, she found two or three packages sitting in her hallway.
The neighbor no longer asked in advance. Instead, she simply started listing the woman’s apartment number in delivery instructions, effectively assigning her as the default recipient.
That shift is where things started to feel uncomfortable.
The woman realized she was no longer doing a favor. She was managing someone else’s logistics without consent.
Beyond the inconvenience, there was a growing concern about responsibility. If something expensive went missing or was damaged while in her possession, she could potentially be held accountable.
Her apartment had essentially become an informal storage point for someone else’s online shopping.
Eventually, she decided to address it directly.
She told her neighbor politely that she was no longer comfortable accepting packages and suggested alternative solutions like package lockers or delivery rerouting.
The neighbor said she understood.
But nothing changed.
Deliveries kept arriving.
After another reminder and another apology, the situation repeated itself. The neighbor agreed verbally but continued using her address anyway.
The breaking point came when another package arrived at her door. This time, instead of accepting it, she told the delivery driver she could not take it. The package was marked undeliverable and had to be rescheduled.
That decision triggered immediate frustration from the neighbor.
The neighbor argued that accepting the package would only take a few seconds and that the refusal caused unnecessary inconvenience. From her perspective, it was a minor request being overcomplicated.
But from the woman’s perspective, the issue was no longer about effort. It was about boundaries that had been repeatedly ignored.
Why Small Favors Become Big Problems
What makes situations like this so tense is how quickly a “one-time favor” can evolve into an assumed responsibility.
According to interpersonal boundary research discussed by Psychology Today, repeated compliance with small requests can unintentionally reinforce expectations, even when no formal agreement exists.
Over time, people may begin to treat access to someone’s time, space, or resources as a given rather than a courtesy.
This pattern is especially common in neighbor relationships because the interactions are informal.
There’s no contract, no official agreement, and often no clear stopping point unless someone explicitly enforces one.
In this case, the woman did exactly that. She communicated twice that she was no longer willing to participate.
When those boundaries were ignored, refusing the package became the only way to enforce them.
Experts on boundary-setting often emphasize that consistency is key. A boundary that is stated but not reinforced tends to lose meaning.
The discomfort that follows enforcing it is often temporary, but the long-term clarity it creates is important for preventing ongoing overreach.
Reddit had a divided but insightful response to the situation:
Most commenters strongly supported the woman, arguing that accepting one package as a favor does not equal consent to become a permanent delivery point.




Many pointed out that the neighbor’s behavior crossed into entitlement once she began listing the apartment without permission. Others highlighted that the responsibility risk alone was enough justification to refuse.








A common sentiment was that the neighbor had multiple chances to correct the behavior and chose not to. At that point, the refusal was not rude, it was necessary.




This situation was never really about a package.
It was about what happens when a small kindness turns into an unspoken obligation.
The woman didn’t suddenly become unhelpful. She simply stopped absorbing responsibility she never agreed to take on in the first place.
Boundaries are often only noticed when they’re enforced. Until then, they can quietly disappear under the weight of convenience.
Was she right to refuse the delivery outright, or should small favors like this come with a little more flexibility, even when they’ve been overused?


















