My name is Mara, and I grow vegetables so my family can eat—not for clout, not for fun.
Every tomato means fewer groceries to buy.
I don’t have the luxury of fences or extras.
Just early mornings, sore hands, and hard-earned food.
It started when my neighbor Julian set up a “Sharing Shelf” nearby.
Nice idea—until people treated my garden like a free-for-all.
Kids trampled kale, adults grabbed cucumbers right off the vine.
When I said something, they smiled like I was being rude.
I put up signs.
A rope fence. I asked for basic respect.
One man told me he “needed” my cherry tomatoes for a date night.
Julian shrugged and said I should “just share.”
But this wasn’t generosity—it was theft dressed in feel-good slogans.
So I installed motion-triggered sprinklers.
Problem solved—thieves got soaked, and word spread fast.
One girl returned with an apology and cookies,
staying outside the fence.
That day, I smiled. Lesson learned: ask, and I’ll probably say yes. Take without asking—expect rain.