When Gregory, our HOA’s self-appointed sheriff, fined me for grass a half-inch too long, I decided to meet tyranny with creativity. I’ve lived on this street twenty-five years, raised kids, buried my husband, and planted every petunia myself. If he wanted to rule the cul-de-sac with a clipboard, he’d have to face a woman armed with the bylaws and a sense of humor.
One clause saved me: lawn décor, allowed if “tasteful.” The next day my yard bloomed into a carnival of compliance—sun-lounging gnomes, flamingos in formation, twinkling lights in the geraniums. Every piece perfectly measured, perfectly legal, and gloriously tacky. Gregory’s car slowed to a crawl; his face went the color of a ripe tomato as I waved sweetly from the porch.
He returned to nitpick a “chipped” mailbox that gleamed like new, so I installed motion sprinklers and more ornaments. When he stepped on my grass, jets of water shot up like the Bellagio fountains. The neighborhood erupted in laughter, and soon Mrs. Jenkins, Mr. Torres, and the Patels joined in—yards glowing with flamingos, fairylights, and rebellion.
Now Gregory drives through a wonderland of pink birds and grinning gnomes, powerless to fine a soul. I sit on my porch with sweet tea, watching neighbors laugh and chat again. My yard is a small act of civil disobedience wrapped in solar lights—and a reminder that sometimes the best way to fight petty power is to make it look ridiculous.