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Article created by: Kotryna Br

Whether we like it or not, there are many rules we have to live by. From laws to regulations to unwritten customs everyone should be aware of, they surround us everywhere we go. But while some of us are team players who follow these suggestions and hope they will serve us well, others believe they should be broken, bent, stretched, or at least somewhat creatively interpreted.

However, there’s a whole other category of people who decide to spread a bit of chaos into our lives and almost beg for others to enforce brand new restrictions for their actions. So recently, Redditor TheBlackTemplar125 decided to find out what these troublemakers did to achieve such outcomes and raised a question on Ask Reddit: "What rules were put in place because of you?"

People rolled up their sleeves and delivered over 16K responses full of hilarious examples and the stories behind them. We have combed the thread and picked out some of the best replies that stood out from the crowd. Continue scrolling, upvote your favorite ones, and don't forget to share your own experiences with us in the comments!

#1

Two yellow rubber chickens with red beaks and feet hanging against a plain wall, symbolizing playful troublemakers. Military school I went to. After me, an adult is required to check the parade cannon to ensure it is clear, and closely monitor the students as they load it. There is to never be another flaming rubber chicken flying over the parade grounds ever again. Circa 1989.

RjBass3 , Todd Van Hoosear Report

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    #2

    A close-up of colorful Sharpie markers scattered, illustrating creativity and behavior of troublemakers in rule-breaking. In middle school i would use sharpies to tattoo myself, other kids thought it was cool so i started charging $1 per drawing wherever they wanted. Principal found out and after i wouldn’t stop, she put a ban on sharpies for the entire school. even the teachers couldn’t bring them in. i’m a tattoo artist now.

    Orbitalconfusion , Nihal Demirci Erenay Report

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    #3

    Three schoolgirls in green skirts and black shoes walking on a paved path, symbolizing troublemakers and rules. School dress code. Girls must wear skirts. We lived in the country. Kids had to walk a half mile on a dirt road to catch the bus. Told the school that in cold weather my girls would wear warm clothing including pants. The changed the dress code. Hogh school wouldn’t let my daughter take auto shop. I talked to the school. They let her in and the following year auto shop was open to all. These incidents occurred in the 1960’s

    Free-Cartographer-26 , billow926 Report

    #4

    Passenger sitting on a bus with purple seats, illustrating everyday rules influenced by common troublemakers. As a kindergartner I once fell asleep in the bus. When I woke up the bus was in the garage and I had to yell to get someone to get me out. So to this day every bus driver in my school district needs to walk to the back of the bus and check every seat before they park the bus. Seems like a good rule to have.

    pikkdogs , Ant Rozetsky Report

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    #5

    Two pizzas with melted cheese and toppings in open cardboard boxes on a white surface, showing rule-breaking food choices. Back in the day a radio station had a weekly trivia contest. The prize was a free pizza and movie rental. Somehow my mom figured out which book they were using for the trivia questions. She bought it and memorized all the answers. Each week we would call in immediately. Sometimes we were the first but even if we weren’t it didn’t matter because other people were usually just guessing. We won almost every time. Even though we changed up who would actually make the call they eventually figured out we were all from the same household. So they made it a rule you couldn’t win if your family had already won in the last month or whatever. Up till then, we enjoyed a lot of free pizzas.

    cavendar , Kristina Bratko Report

    #6

    Two young men smiling and standing with crossed arms, representing troublemakers defying conventional rules. In history class in high school, there was about 10 of us really close friends. We would take every opportunity to make “your mom” jokes. A couple months into class the teacher made us sign a “treaty” promising to stop making fun of each other’s moms. We signed it, and started making fun of each other’s dads.

    MoreMegadeth , Shawnee D Report

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    #7

    A young woman in a purple sweater using hand gestures while speaking, illustrating troublemakers breaking rules concept. No sign language during silent lunch punishment My lunch period was so loud we got put on silent lunch for over a month straight. I decided the only clear solution was to teach my entire table sign language so we could still talk without getting in trouble. Apparently it was "unfair" to the kids who didn't know how to sign, so we had to stop.

    future-unperson , SHVETS production Report

    #8

    Young person writing on paper with a pencil at a wooden table, symbolizing troublemakers creating new rules. My high school biology teacher added "briefly" to all of the essay questions on his tests and quizzes because, if I was bored, I would write unnecessarily long answers in really small handwriting just to take up time. He pointed out the word "briefly" when handing out a test and said to me, "I added that for you." So I made my next answer even longer out of spite.

    HawaiianShirtsOR , Ben Mullins Report

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    #9

    Wendy's restaurant at night with illuminated signs showing quality and freshness, highlighting rules and troublemakers theme. You can no longer skip to the end of training videos at Wendy's. I completed about 10 hours of this training when it was implemented, after I'd already been working there a year, in about 45 minutes. Open, skip, skip, skip, skip, do test, rinse and repeat. I was quite proud of my "estimated time 45 minutes, time to completion 2 minutes". My store which is a franchise location, got a call from corporate like an hour later. I didn't have to redo any of it though.

    Thegungoesbangbang , Batu Gezer Report

    #10

    Bar of dove soap with embossed bird logo, symbolizing simple rules and troublemakers challenging norms. "Don't trick your siblings or friends into eating soap." I would cut bars of dove soap into pieces, wrap them in old candy wrappers, and pretend like they were mints. I was 8 or 9.

    Applesintheorchard , Akshay Bandre Report

    #11

    Young man with piercings and tattoos thoughtfully resting his face on his hand representing troublemakers and rule breakers. "No makeup". I went to an all boys school, and apparently this never came up until me and my emo friends rocked up in black eyeliner and lipstick.

    DanteWrath , Bruno Bueno Report

    #12

    Woman in white shirt and dark blazer listening attentively during a discussion about rulebreaking and troublemakers. I got our HR box taken away at work because the HR lady threatened not to pay us if we missed a clock in or clock out (in our defense the phones didn't always work and the clock in system was really unreliable) and I printed out the law stating that was illegal, highlighted it, and put it in her box when no one was around. She threw an unholy fit and tried to figure out who put it in her box, and from them on everything had to be handed in personally lol.

    Pollowollo , Tim Gouw Report

    #13

    Close-up of a black and orange yo-yo with red string on a wooden surface, symbolizing troublemakers and playful rule-breaking. My junior high made a rule against yo-yos in class after I tried to do a trick and my yo-yo flew across the room and broke a glass beaker set. I’m sorry, guys.

    FartAttack911 , Opollo Photography Report

    #14

    A woman blindfolds a young man outdoors, illustrating troublemakers breaking rules and challenging boundaries. Local amusement park added a "no blindfolds on rollercoasters" rule because of me. When I was in middle school, my friend and I thought it would enhance the overall experience if we blindfolded ourselves on the biggest roller coaster at a local amusement park. We got one of those pictures they take on the ride and there we are, blindfolded in the middle of a tunnel, having the time of our lives. Looking back, we easily could have strangled ourselves or worse because we literally just used scarves tied around our heads. Next year we went back to the same roller coaster and they had added a "no blindfolds or loose accessories" to the list of rules before the ride.

    idontcare4205 , ANTONI SHKRABA production Report

    #15

    Close-up of a hand holding a USB flash drive symbolizing 30 troublemakers impacting rules and regulations creativity. Local jobcenter no longer has working usb ports on public PC's because I found private files on multiple PC's with far too much private information about strangers.

    BelthazorDK , Anete Lusina Report

    #16

    Two golden croissants on a black plate with a glass of milk, illustrating a relaxed breakfast moment for troublemakers. I put a croissant in one of those hotel toasters. It soon became engulfed in flames and needed extinguishing. Next day at breakfast they made a sign that said “if you’d like your croissant toasted, please ask a member of staff”

    thatbitchlol , Kobby Mendez Report

    #17

    Group of young troublemakers jumping on a gym floor wearing athletic shorts and sneakers inside an indoor sports court Back in the 1980s we were allowed to pick our own high school classes. My freshman year I picked two gym classes back to back and the school said no one has ever done that before. Only one gym class was allowed to be scheduled after that. I’m kind of a legend.

    nuF-roF-redruM , cottonbro Report

    #18

    Young woman giving a speech at a podium during a graduation ceremony, symbolizing rule-breaking troublemakers. The valedictorian speech at my high school now needs to be reviewed by the principle before the ceremony for content and length.

    swankpoppy , AliHanlon Report

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    #19

    Vintage Fortran programming manual cover showcasing early automatic coding system for IBM 704 in computing history. Well, I doubt they're teaching the class these days. But when I took "Advanced Programming Techniques Using FORTRAN", our professor added a line to all our projects stating that all programs had to be written in FORTRAN and only in FORTRAN. When a student asked why he'd added that, he told the class to ask me. I just grinned. I still got a perfect score on the one where I had a FORTRAN shell call an assembler subroutine which did 99.99% of the work. Heh.

    HowdyDoobie , wikipedia Report