After Years Of Bad Behavior, He Outsmarts His Eavesdropping Neighbor With One Clever Trick

Neighbor disputes can sometimes feel endless, especially when the other person refuses to act reasonably.

One homeowner found themselves dealing with years of tension, made worse by a mulberry tree that turned their backyard into a sticky, stained disaster.

With fruit constantly falling and birds making things worse, the problem became impossible to ignore.

Instead of direct confrontation, the homeowner tried something unusual…

After Years Of Bad Behavior, He Outsmarts His Eavesdropping Neighbor With One Clever Trick
Not the actual photo

'I__ot Neighbour eavesdrops and I win?'

My neighbour is an i__ot and we have been having issues with her from the start.

(6 hours of relentless dog barking four days a week for years, yelling at me for stealing water flowing downhill,

a dead rabbit on the doorstep, the usual property line arguments, emptying her toxic hot tub onto our property,

lying by the hedges to spy on us, parties, noise, etc, ad nauseam.) Just run-of-the-mill bad neighbour stuff.

Eventually, we built a giant fence, and it has kept the bullcrap to a minimum.

Both yards have plenty of mature trees. We have 3 maples over 150 years old and a nearly 100yr old birch, a 12-foot cedar hedge;

add that to the giant fence, and daylight is at a minimum in our backyard in the summer.

I__ot neighbour had 2 century old trees and a very mature mulberry tree that hung over the fence in the only area that enjoys direct sunlight.

Now, this part is entirely our fault: One spring, we built a patio there, with light grey stone.

The mulberry tree has dark purple fruit, and it is extremely prolific.

The week construction was finished was the week the berries ripened and began to drop in the slightest breeze.

Sitting out there for any length of time, and you would be pelted with berries, leaving purple stains like you were shot with

a paintball, and sweeping a path was the only way to not step on them.

If this only lasted for a few weeks, it would be tolerable, but mulberries are in season all summer.

The amount of birds that feasted on the fruit and promptly deposited bright purple bird s__t on everything we owned outside was unbelievable.

Purple bird s__t drip dried everywhere on the patio and beyond.

We started putting tarps over the entire patio to collect the bird dung-coated berries and emptying them into a bucket every time we wanted to use the patio.

Remembering our neighbour's penchant for eavesdropping, I began to talk about mulberry wine.

About how good my mulberry wine was, and how this year's bumper crop of mulberries was going to make so much wine,

and how we were going to go on vacation with all the money I was making from selling my mulberry moonshine.

Visitors joined in the act, claiming they could not wait for their allotment of my fabulous mulberry wine and offering bribes to be moved up the list.

I do not make mulberry wine, never have, and would not start with mulberry-bird poop wine. One rainy early summer night, I heard and felt a tremendous crash.

I ran into the backyard, and the largest limb from the mulberry tree was lying in my backyard.

A chainsaw was sputtering on the other side of my giant fence, the mulberry tree was coming down, at night, in a rainstorm (more evidence of her idiocy).

There was a bit of yelling back and forth through the fence, me about her being a dangerous moron, and her to me about having

a nice vacation without having mulberry wine to sell. She continued to cut down the whole tree instead of just the limbs hanging over our property.

I laughed myself into the house, not quite believing my ruse worked so well, and revenge was finally mine, but that poor tree died needlessly.

Barely a month later, a vicious storm blew through our area, splitting one of her mature trees in half and damaging the other so badly it had to be removed.

Now the i__ot has no trees but all mine are still standing.

It feels like a small win, but the situation reveals something much bigger beneath the surface. What played out here wasn’t just a clever trick, it was the result of long-term friction finally spilling into indirect retaliation.

At its core, the OP had been dealing with a persistently difficult neighbor whose behavior crossed from annoying into invasive.

The list of issues, noise, boundary disputes, spying, suggests a pattern rather than isolated incidents. When the mulberry tree began interfering with the patio, it became the latest flashpoint in an already strained relationship.

Instead of direct confrontation, the OP used social manipulation, planting an idea through overheard conversations. The neighbor’s reaction, cutting down the tree in a storm, points to impulsivity and a desire to regain control, even at personal cost.

From one perspective, the OP’s approach seems resourceful. After years of frustration, it allowed them to resolve a problem without escalation or legal conflict. Yet there’s another angle that complicates the outcome.

The deception led to the destruction of a mature tree, something the OP themselves recognized as unnecessary. That introduces an ethical tension. The “win” solved the immediate annoyance but contributed to a loss that can’t easily be undone.

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This dynamic reflects a broader pattern in neighbor relationships. According to a FindLaw survey, 42% of Americans report having had a dispute with a neighbor, with common triggers including noise, pets, and property boundaries.

These conflicts rarely begin with major incidents. Instead, they build gradually through repeated small irritations, much like the OP described.

Another report found that over half of Americans (56%) have complaints about their neighbors, and nearly half say a neighbor has done something negative to them. That accumulation often shifts behavior from cooperation to quiet retaliation.

Sociological research also highlights why these situations escalate. A study on neighborhood dynamics published in Sociological Perspectives found that “everyday troubles” between neighbors are common and often shaped by proximity rather than choice.

In other words, neighbors are one of the few relationships people cannot easily opt out of. That lack of choice increases the likelihood of tension and makes informal strategies, like avoidance, passive aggression, or indirect influence, more common.

The OP’s strategy aligns with what behavioral psychologist Dr. Robert Cialdini describes in his work on influence. He explains that people are more likely to act on conclusions they believe they reached themselves.

In this case, the neighbor wasn’t told to remove the tree. She inferred a narrative about profit and acted on it, which made the decision feel internally justified, even if it was based on false assumptions.

That subtle manipulation proved effective, but also unpredictable, as seen in the extreme outcome.

A more balanced path forward would focus on minimizing future escalation rather than seeking further victories. Maintaining physical boundaries, limiting interaction, and documenting incidents may help prevent new conflicts from spiraling.

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In long-term neighbor disputes, stability often matters more than winning individual battles. Direct communication can still work in some cases, but only when both sides show a baseline willingness to engage respectfully, which may not apply here.

What this story ultimately highlights is how prolonged tension reshapes behavior. The OP didn’t just deal with a messy tree problem. They adapted to an environment where cooperation had already failed, turning to indirect tactics to regain control.

Through that experience, the core message becomes clear: when small conflicts are left unresolved for too long, they evolve into situations where resolution feels less like compromise and more like outmaneuvering the other person, sometimes at a cost that no one initially intended.

Check out how the community responded:

These commenters leaned all the way into the chaos, joking that OP should double down on the fake mulberry wine story.

[Reddit User] − That is not run of the mill bad neighbor stuff.

SlappyHandstrong − Now, when you’re outside, have loud conversations about how the mulberry wine market cratered out

and thank god that tree went down before you financed this year’s operation.

How, in hindsight, that tree coming down save you from financial ruin?

Purple_Ingenuity_302 − Keep talking about your mulberry wine, she'll drive herself crazy trying to figure out where you're getting your berries from 🤣

seeminglyokay44 − I'm surprised she didn't demand a bottle...her tree and all.

CoderJoe1 − The neighborhood tree wars have left her stumped.

This group focused more on the practical side, acknowledging how messy mulberry trees can be while also suggesting realistic fixes like bird deterrents, though they still admitted the neighbor made things worse for herself.

TheDeafGuy8 − I feel bad for the tree getting cut down, but in the end, she’s being a dumbass, and she’s bringing her property value down massively, considering they’re older...

BenjPhoto1 − I think all mulberry trees are prolific.

Had one in our yard, and you can’t walk anywhere near it without getting it on your feet.

The bird bombs also increase the radius of the staining.

clva666 − Toy snakes on patio are pretty good bird repellent for people with sane neighbours.

Lo_tessa − Mulberry wine sounds kinda tasty, though.

These users agreed the neighbor’s behavior was far from “normal,” backing OP while pointing out that the neighbor essentially sabotaged her own property through paranoia and overreaction.

DoctorGuvnor − 'Lying by the hedges to spy on us. Just run of the mill bad neighbour stuff.' That is not 'run of the mill', that's psychosis.

TheWildColonialBoy1 − Letting the offending party dig their own grave is some of the best kind of revenge out there.

Petshpboy17 − Tom Sawyer s__t…

[Reddit User] − I love it!!!! 🤣

A few raised eyebrows at the bigger picture, mentioning legal concerns about cutting down mature trees and questioning how far things escalated.

wellthatexplainsalot − Some places, it's illegal to cut down old trees without official permission.

Just saying that you may want to check your local laws.

Belzeturtle − Barely a month later, a vicious storm blew through our area.

The air must've been really dense and thick! Cool story though, I enjoyed it.

What started as a messy patio problem somehow turned into a full-blown mind game that ended with a chainsaw in the rain and a tree gone for good. OP didn’t exactly plan revenge, but the result feels almost too perfect, except for that poor mulberry.

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Do you think this was harmless payback, or did things spiral further than they should have? And if you had a neighbor like this, would you play along… or push back harder? Drop your thoughts below!

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