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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to chop the hedge nice and low? (aka is revenge a dish best served cold?)

121 replies

Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 16:27

First post in AIBU so here goes - a bit of background (it's long sorry)

I moved to London 5 years ago with my autistic DS - we found the most amazing maisonette flat and to this day, I still love the flat itself. However for the last 5 years I have effectively been bullied by my neighbour who lives downstairs. I couldn't go into every single incident but here's a tasty roundup:

  • Telling me I made the place look like 'a council house' when actually I am the one who has primarily maintained the joint areas. I feel though tbh this was a jibe at being a single parent
  • Having a weird obsession with my washing machine - having a go for putting it on at night, putting it on too much "why do you need to do so much washing anyway" and then when I got a tumble dryer it was that. I should point out it makes no more noise than any other washing machine I have ever encountered. Even when I bought special rubber matting to appease this, it wasn't enough. Add to that noise about the TV / talking with my friends when they come over etc etc - I often wonder if she sits with her ear to the ceiling.
  • Having a go at me for 'stomping' to the toilet too late at night. We absolutely, certainly do not stomp around anywhere. In fact I constantly would remind DS to tip toe everywhere which looking back was pointless and stupid. In fact so many things we did to appease her were pointless as she just found something new to complain about.
  • Banging on the door and shouting at my babysitter for shouting up the stairs once for my DS to come down and get his coat on
  • Continually telling me that I shouldn't be in a flat with a child.

-Then putting up a 6ft fence down the middle of the shared garden without consulting / telling me

-Pushing fag butts under my door that she found in her garden that she is convinced came from me. I didn't even smoke.

Anyway, that was supposed to be a round up. There's loads more petty and ultimately bizarre things. As you can see they are not huge incidences in themselves but over 5 years it has totally worn me down. If I pass her she looks at me as if she scraped me off her shoe. I am now thankfully moving but I received another lovely note from her the other day telling me to cut the hedge at the front of the garden. She claims that since she has paid for it every year except last year (not true, I actually cut it myself the first two years she was here, which she seems to have forgotten, plus the fact I was the only one who mowed the last for the first 2 years too) that I had to fulfill my obligations to maintain the shared areas and 'address the imbalance.'

Now, I'm moving in approximately 2 weeks. I'm currently dealing with DS's transition to secondary school and I am also interviewing for jobs - it's not a huge priority and since I paid for it last year, I had assumed she would pay for it this year. I am worried about her making my life hell before I move. Everyone I know thinks I should just ignore it and let her get on with it.

However, when I used to cut it myself, I asked her if we could cut it down low to make it easier (as it's currently over 6 ft) and she said no because she wanted it to completely cover her windows. (Windows I should point out have those plantation shutters on them so kinda private) There's a teeny weeny part of me that wants to cut the hedge but chop it in half!

I would totally and utterly be stoking the fire wouldn't I? I've been so miserable here though (and I am bitter because as I said, I loved living here apart from that - I have lovely neighbours either side who have never complained about noise and admit they never ever hear us, even when I am playing music) that I feel like I want the last laugh after years of actually being too scared to go into my own garden.

Anyway - so cut the hedge / don't cut the hedge?

OP posts:
ILoveYouToo · 21/06/2011 17:48

Rosie said "The washing machine was never on after 8pm (well maybe once or twice when I had an emergency sports kit to wash for the next day but that really was it)"

That isn't late at all. She sounds deranged!

"and also - the woman in question is no older than 40."
Even more illustrative of the ageism I see on MN, is that people are assuming that because she's horrible and unreasonable, she must be old....

BloodyMary said "Serve the old cow right."

HerHissyness said "Weedkiller on the lawn to write out Beware LOONY OLD DEAR lives here"

Hmm

MummyTigger said "I concur. Cut the bitches hedge down to a weedy little stump.
Also, because I'm a vindictive and cruel bitch to make a point of how much she's made you suffer, destroy any plants or flowers that grow in the garden, and then salt the earth so that nothing can ever grow there again."

Yes you really do sound like a vindictive and cruel bitch, MummyTigger. Hmm What about the new owners of the OP's flat? Or the wildlife that uses the garden?

StayingDavidTennantsGirl · 21/06/2011 17:59

Instead of writing a message in weedkiller on the lawn, why not plant it in marigold seeds that will come up next year, when you are long gone, OP!

bigTillyMint · 21/06/2011 18:07

Love this thread.

Your neighbour sounds like a miserable cow who needs a good shag Grin

Bloodymary · 21/06/2011 18:10

Whoops, I take it back Blush

But really, she is no older than 40!!!

Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 18:16

I suppose tbh, as much as I am tempted by the nails / weedkiller etc - it is also going to be the new neighbours hedge and they really haven't done anything wrong. Plus, as I said, they are doing me a favour by bringing in a socking great piano :D I also have to say, for all that revenge does TEMPT me. I'm not sure I could do it - it seems so much like 'her' tbh. Consider this an about turn :)

LIYT - I'm not so sure it's automatically ageism - there's a common stereotype for people who are older to generally be less tolerant or whatever and I don't think it's just MN. When I talk about my lovely neurotic neighbour in RL most people assume she's a lot older but it's more, I think, because people assume that most people about 40 or so would have their own families / own social life and wouldn't really be like this.

OP posts:
Rosietheriveter28 · 21/06/2011 18:19

Thanks for all your replies btw - it's been super funny and cheered me up no end about it all

OP posts:
cantpooinpeace · 21/06/2011 18:22

Cut it.....do it & tell us how it went on a thread called "I cut the hedge people" :)

merryberry · 21/06/2011 18:25

Aha, let the new piano be your revenge:)

CheerMum · 21/06/2011 19:22

lets hope they will be giving lessons from home (3 hours of chopsticks every afternoon hehehe)

thekidsmom · 21/06/2011 19:28

Lol at the piano.....hope there's a drum kit too!

helpingout · 21/06/2011 19:31

Cut the hedge then post her address on here so we can send her junk-mail!

thederkinsdame · 21/06/2011 19:34

Personally, I'd leave it for her to do. Argue that you can't cut it now - it's illegal as birds are nesting (that is true) and leave it for the miserable old bat to contend with. What better satisfaction to know that you haven't expended any time or energy to do it and the old bint will be out of pocket? If she mentions it again say 'Nah, we haven't talked about that. Maybe you imagined it. Better get some sudoku as it sounds like your memory's going dear...'
Leave with your head high, deal with your family and ignore her. She'll be history soon enough. I would, however, sign her up to lots of junk mail once you have left.... porn, incontince pads, you name it Wink

WhoAteMySnickers · 21/06/2011 19:36

If I were you, the hedge trimmer would be the very last thing I packed onto the removal van, after cutting the hedge down to six inches.

DO IT, DO IT, DO IT!!! Grin

floosiemcwoosie · 21/06/2011 19:37

I would spend your remaining time doing as much to piss her off as you could!

Do everything she has blamed you for.

stillstanding · 21/06/2011 19:39

I think that thederkindames right ... if you're anything like me it'll feel great for a bit but will then haunt you. Better to take the high road ...

But please don't trim the hedge before you go. She can bloody well do that herself.

ILoveYouToo · 21/06/2011 19:45

Could you arrange for some piano lessons from the new owners Rosie?

I reckon after a few hours of you thumping out chopsticks at an odd and unpredictable rhythym, hedgegate will be a distant memory for your deranged neighbour. Grin

ajandjjmum · 21/06/2011 19:46

Rosie
If you cut the hedge, would it have any impact on your sale?
If not, I'd do it, and tell everyone that the cow had asked you to. Not down completely, but maybe to half it's size, so she'd have plenty of time to wind herself up over it, as it (slowly) grew.

ILoveYouToo · 21/06/2011 19:49

thederkinsdame said "you can't cut it now - it's illegal as birds are nesting"

That's absolutely correct - I hadn't even thought of that and I've been crying plaintively cautioning 'think of the wildlife'. Blush

purits · 21/06/2011 19:58

How about starting the job but not finishing it. Six foot hedge is OK, three foot hedge is OK but a half'n'half would look awful.
The trouble is, if you do anything dreastic it is not only nasty neighbour that has to live with it but also new tenants. It's a bit unfair on them.

If you are going to do any lopping, what are you going to do with the trimmings?

thederkinsdame · 21/06/2011 19:59

Also, do you really want to antagonise her when your DS has autism? If things get nasty how will he cope with her possibly harrassing you and being (possibly) aggressive and by the sounds of it quite shouty? She has form so I think you need to think of him and how it will affect him. Leave it high and if she cuts it herself report her for cutting it during nesting season!

PssstOverHere · 21/06/2011 20:18

Can you just say something like you'll get around to it if you can fit it in, you are really busy getting ready to move. You can't wait to move, the new area is going to be so much nicer than around here...oh, plus you think that she'll love the new neighbours, they are lovely people, very musical - they even have a piano!

Just let her stew about the piano that will be arriving.

PrettyCandles · 21/06/2011 20:18

Oh don't sink to her level. Why add more stress to your moving day?

How about cutting one token branch from the hedge and posting it through her letter box when you leave?

thederkinsdame · 21/06/2011 20:21

said with tongue in cheek, but with the branch can you also post a note pinned to the BIGGEST pair of pants you can find, saying 'I saw these judgy pants and I thought of you.'

PinkSchmoo · 21/06/2011 20:43

You could make it clear you have arranged to have the hedge trimmed on your last day.

Then cut a single sprig of and present it to her.

No damage done, you've stuck to your word and she'll be hopping mad.

Could even present the sprig wrapped up like a fancy bunch of flowers with a nice "thank you for teaching me so much abOut being a good neighbour" card.

Hugely passive aggressive I know.

aquashiv · 21/06/2011 20:47

VerintheWhite absolutley that would be way to go or could you just leave it if its her turn? When in doubt do doubt. She sounds bitter and twisted enough really.

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