I’ve been a construction foreman for 20 years. I’ve dealt with angry clients, blown budgets, and mountain-side heat, but I’ve never seen anyone quite like the woman who rolled into our clearly marked “No Parking” zone this morning.
She parked her gleaming white SUV squarely in our only loading spot, blocking our lumber delivery. When I approached her window to politely ask her to move, she didn’t even look up from her phone.
“I’ll just be a few minutes,” she snapped, not even bothering to lower the window more than an inch. “Your truck isn’t even here yet. Take a chill pill, dude.”
The window hummed shut.
Thirty seconds later, our lumber delivery truck rumbled around the corner. I had a choice: argue with a wall, or get creative. I looked at my delivery driver, Jerry, and gave him a slow, deliberate nod.
“She wants us to work around her,” I said. “Let’s do exactly that.”
Jerry maneuvered his massive flatbed with surgical precision. He pulled in inches from her driver’s side door, trapping her against a plastic porta-potty we had on-site. She was officially boxed in. There was no way out, no way to open her door, and no way to move until we were finished unloading.
We went to work. We didn’t rush. We didn’t sweat. We just moved boards, one by one, watching the SUV from the corner of our eyes.
Ten minutes later, the realization hit her. I watched her scramble from the driver’s seat to the passenger side, tumbling out onto the pavement in a designer-blouse heap. She was red-faced, furious, and pointing a manicured finger at us.
“Move. Your. Truck. NOW,” she shrieked.
“Ma’am,” Jerry said, leaning against the flatbed with exaggerated patience, “our load is unstrapped. Company policy prohibits moving with an unsecured load. We’re working as fast as we can.”
I flashed her a customer-service smile. “Can’t you just pull out around us? It’s not that hard.”
The look on her face was worth every second of the back-breaking labor. She realized I was using her own words against her.
She stormed back to her car, threw it into reverse, and floored it.
She wasn’t looking. She wasn’t thinking. She just wanted to escape the humiliation. The SUV jumped backward like a spooked horse and plowed straight into our poor porta-potty. The thing didn’t just tip—it disintegrated.
She then tried to mount the sidewalk to escape, but the SUV just sat there, wheels spinning and screaming, stuck high-centered on the curb.
That’s when Officer Martinez pulled up.
Our “entitled mom” tried to blame us, but the officer wasn’t having it. As the officer started writing up the reckless driving, child endangerment, and destruction of property charges, I saw the exact moment the fight left her body. Her shoulders slumped, her color drained, and she finally sat down on the curb—not as a queen of the road, but as someone who was about to have a very, very expensive day.
By the time the tow truck arrived to peel her SUV off the sidewalk, she was in handcuffs. Turns out, she didn’t even have a valid license.
As my crew and I cracked open cold drinks at the end of the shift, looking out over the mountainside, we didn’t feel bad. We felt like we’d just witnessed the universe correcting a mistake.
She wanted to be the most important person on that mountain, and by the end of the day, she was the only one going home in the back of a police cruiser.







