For a decade, my neighborhood was the picture of peace. Lawns were trimmed with pride, weekend barbecues echoed with laughter, and everyone knew when to keep things friendly and quiet. Then Tim moved in next door—and brought chaos with him like it was a housewarming gift.
He didn’t seem so bad at first. Said all the right things, wore a big smile, and even mentioned wanting a laid-back life.
“I’ve always wanted to have a place where neighbors could barbecue and drink beer together,” he chuckled when we met.
Sounded good to me. I welcomed him. Thought maybe we’d actually get along.
But two weeks in, things started shifting.
Tim knocked on my door one afternoon, all casual charm. “Hey man, driveway’s being redone—mind if I use yours for a couple days? My truck’s too big for the curb.”
I felt bad turning him down, but I had to be honest. Between my wife Kelsey’s car, our two teenagers always coming and going, and my own schedule, we needed our driveway.
“Sorry, Tim. Just not possible,” I said, trying to keep it polite.
He didn’t take it well. Huffed and stormed off like I’d just insulted his mother.
The next morning, I found his truck wedged halfway into my driveway anyway—blocking me in.
I knocked on his door, teeth clenched. He answered in pajama pants and shrugged like it was no big deal.
“It’s just for a few hours, man. Chill.”
“No, Tim. Move it. Now.”
He made a big show of it—grumbling, hooting sarcastically as I drove off—but at least he moved it. I thought that was the end of it.
It wasn’t.
For the next week, he kept doing it. If there was room on my property, Tim treated it like it was his own personal overflow lot. Friends’ cars, his lawn equipment, boxes—didn’t matter. If I had space, he took it.
Kelsey urged me to stay calm.
“File a complaint with the HOA,” she said over dinner. “Let them handle it.”
She was right, of course. But before I could even make the call, Tim escalated.
The next morning, I stepped outside—and my heart sank. Spray-painted in flaming orange across my lawn:
SELFISH JERK.
My perfectly trimmed grass. Destroyed. And visible to the entire neighborhood.
I snapped photos and stormed over to his house.
He opened the door, grinning. Like a kid who’d just ding-dong-ditched the principal.
“You think this is funny?” I asked, shoving my phone toward him.
He just smirked. “Gonna call the cops over a little paint?”
“I might,” I said, voice low. “You’re going to regret this.”
And I meant it.
I did file a report at the police station, but they couldn’t do much. No real property damage, they said. Just a ‘neighborhood dispute.’
So I turned to my brother, Andrew. He runs a landscaping company—and he has a mean streak when it comes to revenge.
“I’ve got just the thing,” he told me, laughing.
That weekend, Andrew and his crew showed up. We tore up the front lawn, laid down fresh sod, and installed something special: a sprinkler system with a harmless, chalk-based dye.
“When it goes off,” Andrew explained, “it’ll shoot out bright blue water. Non-toxic, washes off… but it makes a point.”
Oh, I was ready.
Sunday morning arrived. Coffee in hand, I stood on my porch as Tim walked his dog—right past my new lawn.
Click. The sprinklers came alive.
A wall of blue water hit him square in the chest. The dog too. Both of them stood there, drenched, dripping in vibrant blue. The look on Tim’s face? Priceless. He spun around, cursing, and sprinted home in a streak of sky-colored shame.
Later, he stomped over to my house, still stained.
“What the hell, man?” he barked.
I leaned against the doorframe, arms folded. Calm. Unbothered.
“What are you gonna do, Tim? Call the cops over some water?”
He stared at me, jaw twitching, but had no comeback. Just turned and walked away.
Since then? Not a single tire on my driveway. No spray paint. No boxes. Nothing. He even waves now—awkwardly, but still.
And I’ve got the sprinklers on a timer. Just in case he forgets.