In a letter, a woman expresses frustration with loud guests engaging in passionate activities during their stay at her home. She highlights that renting hotels is expensive during winter sports season and describes the guests as perfect except for their loudness. The response advises that guests may not always be considerate, and suggests a preemptive conversation about noise levels before future visits. The advice emphasizes the importance of setting expectations to avoid discomfort, while also acknowledging the unpredictability of guest behavior.
The sad fact of life is that you aren't entitled to consideration, no matter how pronounced yours is. If you graciously invite someone into your house, they may insult your mother, kick your dog, scare your child, take a shit on your floor, and/or have a screaming orgasm while separated from you by a mere wall.
In the future, I think the best you can do preemptively is to tell your guests that your walls are thin, you and your husband are light sleepers, and everyone should try to stay as quiet as possible at night.
It's not an egregious invention and at least you'd be reminding people up front to mind their manners. Again, whether they will or not is kind of a crap shoot.
Should they nonetheless have pyrotechnical sex the first night, you would have every right to remind them the next day that you can hear everything in this house.
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