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AITJ for not letting my neighbor park on my lawn to use my trees shade
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The tension isn’t the money or a five-dollar bill taped to the door. It’s the boundaries. The tree grows on private property, and the shade it casts isn’t a public amenity. The neighbor’s argument is that nature’s gifts should be shared, but sharing doesn’t mean trespassing. The lawn isn’t a parking lot, and the mailbox isn’t a toll booth. The line between generosity and entitlement is thin, but it’s real.
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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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The wife’s post on the neighborhood board adds another layer, turning a personal disagreement into a public debate about selfishness and community spirit. The truth is, some people will always see their needs as more urgent than someone else’s rules. The real issue isn’t the heat or the shade. It’s the expectation that everyone else should bend to make life easier for them.
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Natural resources ceased to be up for grabs when civilization started allowing private property, and I’m pretty sure the neighbor’s parking habits aren’t part of bringing humanity back to its hunter-gatherer roots. Even when the sun is blazing, someone’s property is someone’s property. Some people will always try to claim what isn’t theirs, and some will always say no. The real test isn’t the weather. It’s who gets to decide what’s fair.
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