'Someone stole my parking spot - so I blocked them in all afternoon'

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The woman was seriously unimpressed with what happened (Stock Image) (Image: Getty Images)
The woman was seriously unimpressed with what happened (Stock Image) (Image: Getty Images)

Wherever there are cars, there are parking rows, and it seems like every day there's someone stealing someone's space, placing cones in an area they want to reserve, and so much more.

Someone explained that they took petty revenge on someone who stole their car parking space by blocking them in - and they took it one step further by making the woman wait two hours when they were ready to leave whilst their colleagues berated the woman.

They took to the Reddit 'petty revenge' forum to explain that they work at a hospital as a lab technician and have only one designated parking spot for their department.

'Someone stole my parking spot - so I blocked them in all afternoon' eiqrtiqkuikuinvThey explained the department only had one designated space (Getty Images/iStockphoto)

They gave some context to the story: "We have ONE reserved parking spot. There's a sign saying it's only for on-call lab technicians from our department, and there's a chain with a padlock in front of it. I

"It is located between a pillar and another building's wall, right next to our lab. There is another team in the lab, and we sometimes let them use the parking spot when we have others available or when we come using public transportation but otherwise we don't share it."

'I left scathing notes on my neighbour's car parked in worst possible place''I left scathing notes on my neighbour's car parked in worst possible place'

Then they shared exactly what happened: "A few weeks ago I started doing the evening shifts. Usually from 10am to 7pm but it can last much longer. I was also on-call so I took my car to the lab. I arrived one morning near 9:45, went to the reserved parking spot but the chain was down and the spot was taken.

"At first I thought it was someone from the other team but I didn't agree to share the spot with anyone and I didn't recognize the car. So I decided to park JUST in front of it, horizontally so that my car wouldn't be on the road. That way, the other car was stuck between the wall, the pillar, and my car.

"At first I was thinking I would move it as soon as I found the colleague and he agreed to let me my spot. But it turns out the car didn't belong to anyone from the lab. One tech had witnessed by the window a lady parking in the spot around 9:40. When he opened the window to tell her not to park there, she just said 'I'm in a hurry I won't be long!' and left walking fast. I checked if there was a phone number left under the windshield that I could call but nothing.

"So we decided 'You know what? My car is fine where it is. It's not on the road, it leaves enough sidewalk for pedestrians to be safe, and it's only blocking her. I don't have time to go find another parking spot at this hour, which would probably be at the end of the hospital site. Plus I have a sticker on my car saying it can park at some places in the hospital for emergencies. And the day went on."

And they'd forgotten all about the parking situation until at 4pm, someone called the secretary 'wondering why there was a car parked in front of her'.

They continued: "It was a lady wondering why there was a car parked in front of her. Turns out she was also a hospital worker, from another department, who had arrived late to work and couldn't find a place to park so she took the chains down and parked there.

"No idea how she got rid of the padlock but it was old and weathered so it might just have broken. She had just finished ('I won't be long' my a**) and now she wanted to leave but couldn't. First the secretary, a nice woman but not known for her calm temper, berated her on the phone.

"Then she connected the lady to our phone, where a colleague did pretty much the same. Next, another colleague went out to check on my car. According to said colleague, she looked relieved as she thought he was going to move my car. He just told her it was illegal for her to park there and now she had to wait for me or we'd call to have her towed.

"Meanwhile, I was in the middle of a complex procedure that required me to be in a "white room" (sterilized room with controlled atmosphere, sterilised blouse...) so I couldn't just leave what I was doing like that. So she waited. And she called twice more to complain that she needed to leave. And twice she got berated by my colleagues until one of them told to stop or they would involve the hospital's security and actually get her towed."

They explained that the woman had to wait two hours extra to get out of the space - they were ready to leave at 5.50pm, and the original poster didn't leave until 7.30pm.

'I parked on the white lines outside school - I don't think I'm in the wrong''I parked on the white lines outside school - I don't think I'm in the wrong'

In the comments, people weren't showing the woman very much sympathy, especially as she'd lied about how long she'd be.

One wrote: "She deserved it. Especially with her lie of I won't be long. She was lazy and suffer the consequences, I don’t feel sorry for her at all."

Another fumed: "Every time she called, you should have repeated back to her what she said, 'I won't be long.'"

"She should be thankful that you didn't just have her car towed when you arrived", someone raged.

A Redditor joked: "She got more parking than she could have ever hoped for."

What would you have done in this situation? Let us know in the comments.

Danielle Kate Wroe

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