My Neighbor Installed a Toilet on My Lawn with a Note, ‘Flush Your Opinion Here,’ After I Asked Her Not to Sunbathe in Front of My Son’s Window

“Mom!” my son Jake burst into the kitchen one morning, his face redder than the tomatoes I was slicing for lunch. “Can you… um… do something about that? Outside my window?”

I marched to his room and peered out the window.

There was Shannon, sprawled out on a leopard-print lounger, wearing the tiniest bikinis that could generously be called dental floss with sequins. “Just keep your blinds closed, honey,” I said, trying to sound casual while my mind raced. “But I can’t even open them to get fresh air anymore!” Jake slumped against the bed.

“This is so weird. Tommy came over to study yesterday, and he walked into my room and just froze. Like, mouth open, eyes bulging, full system shutdown.

His mom probably won’t let him come back!”

I sighed, closing the blinds. “Has she been out there like that every day?”
“Every. Single.

Day. Mom, I’m dying. I can’t live like this.

I’m going to have to become a mole person and live in the basement. Do we have Wi-Fi down there?”

After a week of watching my teenage son practically parkour around his room to avoid glimpsing our exhibitionist neighbor, I decided to have a friendly chat with Shannon. I usually mind my own business when it comes to what people do in their yards, but Shannon’s idea of ‘sunbathing’ was more like a public performance.

She’d lounge around in the skimpiest of bikinis, sometimes even going topless, and there was no way to miss her every time we stood near Jake’s window. “Hey, Shannon,” I called out, aiming for that sweet spot between ‘friendly neighbor’ and ‘concerned parent’ tone of voice. “Got a minute?”

She lowered her oversized sunglasses, the ones that made her look like a bedazzled praying mantis.

“Renee! Come to borrow some tanning oil? I just got this amazing coconut one.

Makes you smell like a tropical vacation and poor life choices.”

“Actually, I wanted to talk about your sunbathing spot. See, it’s right in front of my son Jake’s window, and he’s 15, and—”

“Oh. My.

God.” Shannon sat up, her face splitting into an unnervingly wide grin. “Are you seriously trying to police where I can get my vitamin D? In my own yard?”

“That’s not what I—”

“Listen, sweetie,” she cut me off, examining her hot pink nails like they held the secrets to the universe.

“If your kid can’t handle seeing a confident woman living her best life, maybe you should invest in better blinds. Or therapy. Or both.

I know this amazing life coach who could help him overcome his repression. She specializes in aura cleansing and interpretive dance.”

“Shannon, please. I’m just asking if you could maybe move your chair literally anywhere else in your yard.

You have two acres!”

“Hmm.” She tapped her chin thoughtfully, then reached for her phone. “Let me check my schedule. Oh, look at that!

I’m booked solid with not caring about your opinion until… forever.”

I retreated, wondering if I’d somehow stumbled into an episode of “Neighbors Gone Wild.” But Shannon wasn’t done with me yet. Not by a long shot. Two days later, I opened my front door to grab the newspaper and stopped dead in my tracks.

There, proudly displayed in the middle of my perfectly manicured lawn, was a toilet bowl. Not just any toilet. It was an old, filthy, tetanus-inducing throne, complete with a handwritten sign that read: “FLUSH YOUR OPINION HERE!”

I knew it was Shannon’s handiwork.

“What do you think of my art installation?” her voice floated over from her yard. She was perched on her lounger, looking like a very smug, very underdressed cat. “I call it ‘Modern Suburban Discourse.’ The local art gallery already wants to feature it in their ‘Found Objects’ exhibition!” she laughed.

“Are you kidding me?” I gestured at the porcelain monstrosity. “This is vandalism!”

“No, honey, this is self-expression. Like my sunbathing.

But since you’re so interested in giving opinions about what people do on their property, I thought I’d give you a proper place to put them.”

I stood there on my lawn, staring at Shannon cackling like a hyena, and something inside me just clicked. You know that moment when you realize you’re playing chess with a pigeon? The bird’s just going to knock over all the pieces, strut around like it won, and leave droppings everywhere.

That was Shannon. led my arms and sighed. Sometimes the best revenge is just sitting back and watching karma do its thing.

The weeks that followed tested my patience. Shannon turned her yard into what I can only describe as a one-woman Woodstock. The sunbathing continued, now with an added commentary track.

she invited friends, and her parties rattled windows three houses down, complete with karaoke renditions of “I Will Survive” at 3 a.m. She even started a “meditation drum circle” that sounded more like a herd of caffeinated elephants learning to Riverdance. Through it all, I smiled and waved.

Because here’s the thing about people like Shannon — they’re so busy writing their own drama that they never see the plot twist coming. And oh boy, what a twist it was. It was a pleasant Saturday.

I was baking cookies when I heard sirens. I stepped onto my porch just in time to see a fire truck screech to a halt in front of my house. “Ma’am,” a firefighter approached me, looking confused.

Related Posts

At my stepsister’s 500-guest wedding, the same family who threw me out at sixteen let me stand in the back of the ballroom like I wasn’t even blood. Until the bride stormed across the floor, m0cked my dress, s.lapp.ed me hard enough to turn heads, and called me garbage while half the room laughed.

The slap landed with enough force to snap my head toward the tiers of sparkling champagne glasses. For a single heartbeat, my vision was filled with golden…

A Lonely Hospital Stay That Ended With A Note I Still Cannot Explain

During my two week stay in the hospital, silence became my closest companion, the kind that settles in after the last footsteps fade and the lights dim…

My Sister Sold My Penthouse Behind My Back—Then Asked Why I Was Smiling

The Disappeared I knew something was wrong the second I stepped out of the rideshare and saw the movers. Three of them stood on the sidewalk in…

I Went to Visit My Mother at Her Nursing Home – They Told Me She Had Checked Out a Week Earlier

When Rachel arrives at her mother’s nursing home, she’s told something unthinkable — her mom was discharged a week ago. But Rachel never signed her out. Someone…

I Took My Mom to Prom Because She Missed Hers Raising Me – My Stepsister Humiliated Her, so I Gave Her a Lesson She’ll Remember Forever

When I invited my mom to my senior prom to make up for the one she missed raising me alone, I thought it would be a simple…

After Years of Working Late, I Walked In Early and Saw My Daughter Dragging Her Baby Brother to Safety.

I came in through the garage because it was habit, muscle memory from a thousand late arrivals when I didn’t want to wake anyone by fumbling with…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *