A casual afternoon dog-walk turned explosive when a neighbor mistook a 16-year-old dachshund for a stray and proceeded to try kicking him. You read that right. Fred, a beloved family pet, was hauled inside under the care of his sister’s sibling (that’s you) while the baby nephew’s hospital visits were underway.
Then: the neighbor freaked out at the sight of him and demanded he stay away from her garden.
You’re not a violent person. You’ve learned confronting this neighbor doesn’t help. So instead you hatched a stealthy retaliation: attracting slugs, inviting them onto her patch of lettuces, watching her nightly slug-hunt. Slime meets revenge.
Now, read the full story:
















My heart went out to you and Fred. That poor elderly dog, confused and missing his person, being attacked for no reason, makes me angry on your behalf. But then the slug warfare? I’ll admit: it made me smirk.
There’s something deliciously mischievous in turning someone’s obsessive garden control into a nightly slug-hunt nightmare. At the same time, I felt the unease of the revenge spiral: when you’re retaliating, you’re still in their orbit. The feeling of power is real, but so is the emotional cost.
This feeling of isolation is textbook when someone doesn’t treat your pet like a fellow being. Let’s talk deeper.
At root, your story blends several threads: defence of a vulnerable pet, boundary violation by a neighbour, and your choice of revenge rather than direct confrontation. The power dynamic is clear: the neighbour asserted dominance by insulting Fred and acting aggressively; you felt powerless and reacted by controlling something – her garden.
There’s a meaningful link between animal-mistreatment and broader behavioural problems. According to the PETA, “Research in psychology and criminology shows that animal abusers tend to repeat their crimes … and commit similar offences against members of their own species.”
And from the Humane Society of the United States: “Psychologists acknowledge a connection between human-on-human abuse and animal cruelty… One survey found 30 percent of animal abuse arrestees had records of domestic violence.”
These point to the neighbour’s behaviour (attempting to kick Fred) as potentially more than mere rudeness—it reflects deeper hostility and disregard for boundary and care.
On revenge: A study captured by Psychology Today sums it up:
“People mistakenly believe revenge will make them feel better and gain closure, when in fact punishers ruminate and feel worse than non-punishers.”
Another piece adds:
“Revenge is self-defeating. It will eat away at you until there is nothing left.” In other words, your slug campaign might give you immediate satisfaction but the emotional rumination might hang around.
Advice & actionable insights
-
Protect Fred first: Document the neighbour’s behaviour (dates, time, actions) so that if aggression escalates, you have evidence. Animal-welfare authorities recommend recording signs of cruelty and reporting when needed.
-
Re-define your boundary: Since direct confrontation fails, focus on what you control, keeping Fred safe, setting your own emotional boundaries. That may mean avoiding the neighbour entirely.
-
Channel energy into yourself, rather than her garden: Research suggests redirecting revenge impulses into self-improvement works better than retaliation. “Channel the anger into something productive.”
-
Evaluate the cost-benefit of the slug plan: Yes it’s fun, but anytime you escalate, you maintain the conflict instead of releasing it. Could it spawn a new conflict? Could you face liability if plants get destroyed?
-
Consider mediation or neutral third-party: Even if she’s unreasonable, one neutral person (community mediator, neighbor association) can reduce the emotional energy you spend.
The moral here isn’t just “Don’t mess with old dogs.” It’s about how boundary violations push us into escalation cycles, whether with slugs or sharp words, and how revenge, though tempting, often tethers us rather than frees us.
Your loyalty to Fred is noble. The neighbour’s cruelty is unjust. But who wins if you both stay in a revenge loop?
Check out how the community responded:
These comments stood up for you and Fred, “the dog is the victim, the neighbour is out of line.”

![Insult My Old Dog? Enjoy Your Vegetable Patch Turning Into Swiss Cheese [Reddit User] - People who are cruel to animals (attempting to kick poor old Fred) are the worst kind of scum. She deserves anything you can throw at her!](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1763393511083-2.webp)

These folks applauded the cunning and offered suggestions for garden sabotage.


![Insult My Old Dog? Enjoy Your Vegetable Patch Turning Into Swiss Cheese [Reddit User] - Avenge Fred! Seeds to sow: Parsely, dill and mint Mint takes over right away. The parsely and dill are slow to start and you’ll think you got...](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1763393470518-3.webp)

These comments took note of the title, the garden imagery and the absurdity of the slug invasion.


![Insult My Old Dog? Enjoy Your Vegetable Patch Turning Into Swiss Cheese [Reddit User] - ”He deserves to be avenged” A woman can be an artist. … in anything, food, whatever. U/NotEvil_Just British art is slugs. She’s about to paint her masterpiece.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1763393433362-3.webp)

You stood up for a vulnerable pet and made a creative stand against an unreasonable neighbour. That makes you kind and clever. At the same time you’ve chosen a path of escalation, something that might keep you locked in conflict rather than free you.
What if you channel that same energy into something liberating instead? What if you focus on Fred’s peace and the comfort of your sister’s family instead of the slug siege?
So now I ask you: Was your slug campaign a fitting response, or might it extend the conflict longer than you expect? What might you do to protect Fred and reclaim your emotional freedom?










