A toll booth worker turned a driver’s smug prank into a slow-burn revenge story.
When a man dumped $5 worth of pennies and nickels, the worker made him wait through every single count.
Now, read the full story:









This is the kind of comeback most of us only dream about delivering. The driver wanted to waste someone’s time, but instead he got trapped in his own little performance.
It’s not just funny, it’s a perfect example of flipping power dynamics. The worker didn’t yell, didn’t escalate. They just used patience as a weapon.
At first glance, this is just a petty revenge story. But psychology tells us there’s more going on.
Revenge feels rewarding because it activates the brain’s reward center. A study published by the Association for Psychological Science found that contemplating revenge lights up the caudate nucleus, the same area linked to pleasure from food or nicotine.
Dr. Carolina Estevez, Psy.D., explains: “The reality is that revenge rarely provides lasting relief. Instead, it keeps the pain alive by making you relive the hurt repeatedly”.
But in this case, the “revenge” wasn’t destructive. It was proportional. The worker didn’t scream or retaliate violently. They simply mirrored the driver’s pettiness back at him. That’s why it feels satisfying rather than cruel.
There’s also a legal angle. Many countries limit how much small change can be used in a single payment. For example, Australia’s Currency Act 1965 caps the use of coins like 5c, 10c, and 20c to $5 worth. In other words, the driver’s stunt wouldn’t even be valid tender in some places.
Finally, workplace power dynamics matter. Research shows that when employees reclaim control in small ways, it reduces stress and restores dignity. By calmly enforcing the rules, the toll worker turned a humiliating prank into a moment of authority.
The lesson? Petty revenge can be cathartic, but the real win is reclaiming control without losing your cool.
Check out how the community responded:
Team petty: cheering for the slow-burn revenge and savoring the irony.



Some users zeroed in on OP’s mic-drop moment. They pointed out that most of us only think of the perfect comeback hours later, but OP nailed it in real time. That line elevated the story from funny to iconic.![Toll Booth Worker Serves Justice, One Penny at a Time! [Reddit User] − “Aren’t you glad you waited” is the kind of thing you usually think about after and kick yourself for not getting to use it. Well played!](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762185323668-1.webp)

Others chimed in with their own stories of dealing with coin-dumpers. They explained the rules they used to enforce, like restarting the count if interrupted or treating abandoned coins as forfeited.


Some readers brought in fun facts, like how certain countries actually limit how many coins you can legally use in a single payment.


A few commenters got wistful, reminiscing about the days before EZ-Pass when toll booths were still a thing.
![Toll Booth Worker Serves Justice, One Penny at a Time! [Reddit User] − I grew up on the NYS Thruway and thought toll booth jobs were legendary.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762185356532-1.webp)
This wasn’t just about coins. It was about dignity, patience, and flipping smugness on its head.
Would you have done the same? Or would you have just waved him through to avoid the hassle?









