A Neighbor Tried to Steal My Power—Then His Next Demand Left Me Absolutely Stunned

For the past two weeks, something strange kept happening every time I came home from work. A thick, neon-orange extension cord—so bright it looked like it belonged at a construction site—was trailing from my neighbor’s garage straight into the outdoor socket behind my house. The first time, I thought I was losing my mind.

Maybe he’d plugged into the wrong outlet by accident. Maybe he was in a hurry. Or maybe—just maybe—there was a reasonable explanation.

So I did the polite thing: I unplugged it and didn’t say a word. But the second time? I walked into my garden and caught him mid-plug-in, crouched down like he owned the place.

“Hey,” I said, trying to sound more confused than angry. “That’s my power you’re using. It goes through my meter.”

He didn’t apologize.

He didn’t even pretend to be embarrassed. He just smirked and said, “Relax, mate. It’s only a few cents.”
As if that made it okay.

I should’ve confronted him harder, but I brushed it off. I didn’t want drama with a neighbor. I told myself it was a misunderstanding.

Except it wasn’t. Because two days later, when I came home early, the extension cord was back—snaking across my lawn like a bright orange warning sign. That was the moment I realized he wasn’t confused.

He wasn’t forgetful. He simply didn’t care. So I ordered a lockable outdoor socket cover and installed it.

Nothing dramatic. Just basic home security. And Then… Things Got Weird
This morning, I found a folded note pushed through my letterbox.

I thought it would be an apology or at least a halfhearted explanation. Nope. It was a handwritten complaint—dripping with entitlement—accusing me of “shutting down the community socket.”
Yes, he actually called my personal outlet a community socket.

But he didn’t stop there. He wrote that since I had “selfishly blocked access,” he would now need to charge his e-bike inside my house whenever it rains. And then came the cherry on top:
He told me to leave my back gate unlocked this Saturday so he could “let himself in.”

I stood in my hallway, rereading the note over and over, wondering if I was in some kind of prank show.

Who does that? Who demands access to someone else’s house because they can’t use their electricity for free? I Tried to Be Reasonable—He Didn’t Care
Here’s the thing: I didn’t want bad blood.

I even offered a solution. I told him I’d split the cost of hiring a licensed electrician to install an outdoor socket on his wall. He scoffed.

Literally scoffed. “No need,” he said. “Yours is closer.”

Since then, he’s apparently been going around the neighborhood complaining about me—saying I’m stingy, that I’m “making drama over a few pennies,” that I’m unfriendly.

But the more I think about it, the more I know deep down this has nothing to do with money at all. This is about boundaries. About respect.

About the fact that he thinks other people’s property exists for his convenience. I’m not trying to escalate anything. I just want to be able to live in my own home without someone hijacking my electrical outlet or expecting access to my house.

So I keep asking myself:
Am I really overreacting… or is he just unbelievably, shockingly rude?