They called them “speed humps,” but they were basically knee-high concrete barricades. No warning signs, no paint. Just there overnight.
Like landmines in the middle of the road. Everyone in the neighborhood complained. Tires blew.
Undercarriages scraped. My neighbor’s Prius got stuck on top of one. The HOA president, Melinda, said we needed “traffic calming.”
She also drives a lifted Escalade, so… yeah.
Then Jimmy hit one. And Jimmy does not let things slide. His front bumper cracked.
Bent the frame. The next day, he printed 500 flyers with photos of the damage—and HOA board members’ email addresses. He handed them out door to door.
Twice. But that was just the warm-up. Three days later, we all woke up to the sound of drilling.
Jimmy was out there in his safety vest, cones set up, jackhammer in hand. And when the cops showed up…
He didn’t flinch. Jimmy calmly pulled out a clipboard with a fake “Neighborhood Infrastructure Assessment” logo on it.
He pointed to the cones, the vest, even the jackhammer—rented from Home Depot, apparently—and told the officers, “I’m removing a road hazard. You’re welcome.”
One of the cops leaned over and whispered something to his partner. They took down his name, told him to be careful, and drove off.
We were stunned. The man had just taken a jackhammer to public asphalt and got a thumbs-up from law enforcement. But the real surprise came the next morning.
Instead of arrest warrants or fines, Melinda—the HOA queen herself—sent out a newsletter. Not an apology. Not an update.
A newsletter with a bolded headline: “We Appreciate Resident Feedback.”
Jimmy taped that newsletter to the speed hump stump he’d left behind. Right in the middle of the street. For two weeks, people drove around it like it was a sculpture.
But Melinda? She was just getting started. A week after the “Newsletter Incident,” we got another one.
This one had a fancy header, with stock images of happy families biking. “HOA Beautification Project: Phase Two.”
Underneath? Plans for three more speed humps.
Jimmy nearly lost it. He walked straight to Melinda’s door, newsletter in hand. I know because I was mowing my lawn and saw the whole thing.
She opened her door just a crack. “You put in more of these things,” Jimmy said, “and I’ll turn this whole street into a gravel path.”
Melinda laughed. “You touch HOA property again, I’ll sue.”
And then—this was the twist—Jimmy smiled.
Not like a smug, “I’ve got you” kind of smile. A calm one. The kind of smile someone wears when they’ve already made the next move.
Two days later, a group of us got an email from Jimmy. Subject line: “Neighborhood Watch Meeting (With Snacks).”
Now, technically, we didn’t have a neighborhood watch. But fifty people showed up at Jimmy’s garage that Friday.
There were Costco cookies, lemonade, and Jimmy’s laptop hooked up to a projector. He showed photos, videos, measurements. Compared our street before and after the speed humps.
Highlighted damage reports from neighbors. Even read a statement from Ms. Caldwell, who tripped over one of them walking her poodle.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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