HOA Karen Tried To Claim My Backyard Pool—Then County Records Exposed Her-Ginny

I was halfway through a cannonball into my own pool when Karen tried to have me arrested for trespassing.

Not trespassing in a park.

Not trespassing at a clubhouse.

Image

Trespassing in the backyard attached to the house I had bought, paid for, maintained, and lived in for years.

The splash had barely settled when my side gate burst open and Karen came marching across the patio with her phone raised like a federal badge.

The summer heat was thick enough to taste.

The chlorine stung my nose.

Water ran down my face while I stared at a woman in a crooked visor, giant sunglasses, and a floral blouse that somehow looked hostile.

“You!” she screamed. “You’re trespassing on HOA property. I’ve already called 911.”

For a moment, I honestly wondered whether I had hit my head on the pool wall during the cannonball.

Because no normal brain expects to be accused of trespassing while standing wet and barefoot beside its own pool.

I told her this was my property.

I told her she needed to leave.

Karen smirked like she had been waiting all week for me to say something that foolish.

“This land falls under HOA jurisdiction,” she said. “That pool is technically communal space.”

That was the first time I heard the words communal space applied to the pool I paid to clean, repair, insure, and occasionally float in while reading the same mystery novel I had failed to finish for 3 months.

I tightened my grip on the towel around my shoulders.

The towel was the only thing keeping me from gesturing too broadly and giving the neighborhood more drama than it already had.

I had spent the whole morning mowing the front yard, edging the driveway, trimming the hedges, and repairing the wobbly pool ladder I kept promising myself I would fix next weekend.

By noon, sweat had soaked through my shirt, grass clippings were stuck to my legs, and I had decided I deserved a few hours of silence.

Nineteen minutes.

That was how long the peace lasted before Karen arrived.

To understand how absurd this became, you have to understand what I thought I had bought.

When I first saw the house, the backyard sold me.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *