I caught my neighbor’s 7-year-old son digging in my yard. At first, I tried to handle it politely—I went over to his mom and asked her to please keep him in their yard. She laughed and waved it off, saying, “He’s just a kid.”
I let it go once. Then twice. But two days ago, he broke one of my garden lights, and that was it. I had enough.
So I went and bought a set of outdoor cameras. I installed them around my yard, making sure every corner was covered. The very next day, the boy was back—digging near my flowerbeds. This time, I had it all on video.
I walked over to his mom with the footage on my phone. She looked embarrassed at first, then defensive, saying, “Kids will be kids.”
I calmly replied, “Kids will be kids, but broken property is still broken property. Next time, I’ll send the bill.”
Her face went red. She didn’t laugh this time.
And since then? My yard has been peaceful. No digging. No broken lights.
Sometimes, standing your ground is the only way to be taken seriously—even if it means being the “bad guy” to someone who refuses to parent their own child.