My new neighbor’s truck blocked my driveway for weeks, forcing me into impossible parking maneuvers every morning. I’d asked him nicely and explained the problem. But he just laughed and told me to learn how to drive.
When I finally snapped and called the HOA, karma showed up with a lasting lesson.
I’m Laura, I’m 32, and I’ve been living in Pemberly Lane for three years now. It’s one of those neighborhoods where every house looks like it stepped out of a home improvement show. It’s the kind of place where people smile and wave when you drive by but gossip behind your back.
It was peaceful…
until Rick moved in next door six months ago.
I remember the day he arrived with that enormous black pickup truck that roared down our quiet street like it was auditioning for a monster truck rally. Its tires were so big and the engine rumbled loud enough to set off car alarms.
I was weeding my flower beds when he pulled into the driveway next to mine. I stood up, wiped my hands on my jeans, and waved.
He glanced at me, gave a quick nod, and went back to unloading boxes.
He wasn’t the friendliest guy, but moving is stressful. I got it.
Within a week, though, I started noticing things. His grass grew wild while everyone else’s looked like golf courses.
His garbage cans lived permanently at the curb, overflowing with trash. And worst of all, he started parking that beast of a truck right up against my driveway.
The first morning it happened, I thought it was a mistake. His rear tires hung about two feet over my driveway apron, which meant I had to back out at this ridiculous angle to avoid hitting his bumper.
It took me five tries and a lot of careful maneuvering.
The next morning, same thing. And the morning after that.
I have to leave for work at 7:30 a.m. every day.
My job as a marketing coordinator doesn’t care if my neighbor is inconsiderate. So every single morning, I’d start my car, take a deep breath, and perform this complicated circus just to get onto the street. I’d turn the wheel hard, ease back inch by inch, and pray I don’t scrape Rick’s truck or destroy my hedge.
However, my poor hedge paid the price.
It went from being my pride and joy to looking like something had attacked it with hedge trimmers while blindfolded. Branches bent at weird angles. Leaves were scraped off.
One entire side had lopsided from my side mirror brushing against it every morning.
After two weeks of this, I decided to have a word with Rick.
It was a Tuesday morning. I caught Rick outside with his leaf blower, sending leaves directly into the street where they’d become someone else’s problem.
I walked over, trying to look friendly instead of frustrated. “Hey, Rick!” I called out over the noise.
He glanced at me but didn’t turn off the blower.
“Could you maybe park a little further up the street?
It’s really hard for me to get out when your truck’s that close.”
He finally shut off the blower, but the look on his face wasn’t encouraging. “I’m parked fine,” he said, shrugging. “I’m still on my property.
See that line? I’m not over it.”
“I know, but your back tires hang into my driveway. I can barely get out without hitting something.”
He smiled.
Not a friendly smile. More like the kind you give someone when you think they’re being ridiculous.
“There’s plenty of room, Laura. You just need to learn how to turn your wheel better!”
“I know how to drive.
Your truck’s just…”
“It’s not my problem if you can’t handle a simple parking situation,” he interrupted, then fired up the leaf blower again. The conversation was over.
I walked back to my house, hands clenched, trying to convince myself that maybe he’d think about it. Maybe tomorrow would be different.
It wasn’t.
The next morning, his truck sat in the exact same spot.
I went through the monotonous routine: Deep breath.
Start the car. Turn the wheel hard. Back out slowly.
Hear the scrape of branches against my mirror.
This became my life. Every. Single.
Morning.
I started setting my alarm earlier just to give myself enough time for the parking gymnastics. My coworkers asked why I looked so stressed before 9 a.m. How do you explain that your neighbor’s slowly driving you insane with his parking habits?
By the third week, I’d developed this Pavlovian response.
I’d wake up, remember Rick’s truck, and feel my blood pressure spike before I’d even had coffee.
It wasn’t just about the parking anymore. It was about disrespect and his casual dismissal. Then came the rainy morning that changed everything.
I’d overslept.
My alarm didn’t go off, or maybe I’d accidentally turned it off in my sleep. Either way, I woke up at 6:50 a.m., which gave me exactly 40 minutes to get ready and drive downtown for a meeting.
I threw on my clothes, grabbed my bag, and ran to my car. It was still dark outside, rain coming down in sheets.
I couldn’t see much, but I knew the drill by now.
Start the car. Turn the wheel. Back out slowly.
Except I was rushing. I was stressed and miscalculated, and I bumped into something.
The crunch was sickening.
I’d backed straight into my mailbox. The wooden post split down the middle, and when I got out to look, my bumper had a long, deep scratch running across it.
I sat back in the driver’s seat, rain soaking through my clothes, and felt tears of frustration burning in my eyes.
This was it. This was my breaking point.
That evening, I didn’t bother changing out of my work clothes. I marched straight over to Rick’s house.
He was outside, leaning against his precious truck, scrolling through his phone.
“Rick, I need you to STOP parking like this. I hit my mailbox this morning trying to get around your truck. I damaged my car.
Please. Just move up a few feet.”
He didn’t even look at me. “Laura, I’m parked legally.
You can get out just fine. Maybe you should take a driving class or something.”
“Are you serious right now?”
“Yeah, I’m serious,” he said, finally looking up with that infuriating smirk. “It’s not my fault you can’t handle your car.”
I wanted to argue.
What was the point?
“Fine. Have it your way.”
He went back to his phone, completely unbothered.
I walked back to my house and did something I should’ve done weeks ago.
I grabbed my phone and went back outside.
Methodically, I photographed Rick’s truck from every angle. The way those rear tires hung over my driveway apron.
The positioning that clearly violated our neighborhood parking regulations. I even took a video, narrating as I showed exactly how difficult it was to back out without hitting something.
Our street has signs posted every few houses: “No Blocking Driveways or Sidewalks.” Rick’s truck was in clear violation.
I spent the next hour drafting an email to our HOA. I attached every photo, the video, a timeline of how long this had been happening, and a detailed explanation of the damage I’d suffered because of it.
“I’ve attempted to resolve this directly with my neighbor multiple times,” I wrote.
“He refuses to adjust his parking and has been dismissive of my concerns. I’m requesting formal intervention.”
I hit send and felt a small sense of relief. At least I’d done something.
Two days later, I got a response from Greg, our community manager:
“Thank you for bringing this to our attention, Laura.
We take these violations seriously. A formal warning’s been issued to the resident. If the behavior continues, we’ll proceed with enforcement measures.”
I allowed myself to hope that maybe, finally, this would be over.
The next morning, there was a yellow notice taped to Rick’s front door.
Official HOA letterhead. Impossible to miss.
But that afternoon, his truck was parked in the exact same spot.
I watched from my kitchen window as Rick came home from wherever he’d been. He ripped the notice off his door, barely glanced at it, crumpled it up, and tossed it into his garbage can.
Then he got on his phone.
I could hear him through my open window, laughing.
“Yeah, the HOA sent me some stupid warning,” he said to whoever was on the other end. “Like I care. I’m not moving my truck for anybody!”
That night, I sent a follow-up email to Greg with photos showing Rick’s truck still in the same position, timestamped after the warning was issued.
“The violation continues,” I wrote.
Greg’s response came within an hour:
“Noted.
We’ll handle this.”
The next morning, I was sitting on my front porch with my coffee, trying to enjoy the cool morning air before another day of parking frustration. A white SUV with

