Sharing a common name with a stranger might sound harmless, even funny, until their life starts landing in your inbox.
For years, one person watched as reservation confirmations, travel details, and shopping receipts meant for someone else kept arriving, all because of a nearly identical email address. At first, it seemed like an honest mistake that could be fixed with a quick conversation.
But repeated attempts to correct it went nowhere. The stranger behind the emails knew what she was doing and made it clear she had no intention of stopping. That is when the situation quietly shifted from annoying to tempting.
When store rewards and discounts started showing up alongside the spam, the OP faced a moral gray area that many internet users will recognize. Scroll down to see how a small act of digital carelessness led to an unexpected form of payback.
A longtime Gmail user keeps getting a stranger’s shopping emails, until store rewards enter the mix















There’s a deeply human experience in feeling unseen or unheard when someone continually crosses into your personal space, digital or otherwise. Whether it’s your home, your time, or your inbox, repeated intrusion can wear down patience, erode trust, and trigger a mix of frustration and exhaustion.
Most people have had moments where their boundaries were ignored, small at first, but cumulative and at some point, even good-natured tolerance can turn into resentment.
In the Reddit story, the original poster (OP) wasn’t simply annoyed by stray emails; they were contending with an ongoing invasion of their digital identity. For years, someone else has been using the OP’s email address for personal reservations, hotel confirmations, and now Kohl’s rewards, despite the OP’s polite requests to stop.
Over time, that disregard became not just inconvenient but disrespectful. When repeated communication failed, OP chose to use the Kohl’s Cash intended for the other person.
To many readers, that act might read as humorous retaliation; to others, it signals a breaking point after sustained boundary violations. This isn’t just about “stealing rewards,” but reclaiming agency after feeling repeatedly dismissed.
While many focus on whether OP’s response was “right” or “wrong,” another interesting angle is how different personalities navigate boundary breaches. Some people are more likely to internalize repeated disrespect and continue trying to placate the other person, hoping understanding will emerge.
Others, when faced with persistent disregard, shift into assertive self-advocacy, prioritizing their own sense of control. In gendered communication research, there are patterns where some individuals may react to boundary crossing with humor, reframing the situation as a form of justice, while others respond with withdrawal or avoidance.
According to Psychology Today, establishing boundaries means knowing what one wants, what one finds acceptable from others, and clearly stating those limits, even when it’s difficult.
People who repeatedly fail to assert their needs may fear conflict or worry their needs are less important, but learning to set and maintain boundaries is essential for mental well-being and self-respect.
This expert insight illuminates why OP’s escalating reaction makes emotional sense. When someone’s privacy is repeatedly compromised, and simple requests for respect go ignored, the person on the receiving end may shift from polite boundary-setting to acts of reclaiming control.
That shift doesn’t always look textbook-healthy, but it reflects a very human psychological process: defense of identity and dignity. In situations where boundaries are persistently dismissed, people may resort to alternative forms of asserting their autonomy, especially when other forms of communication fail.
Rather than only judging OP’s actions, this story points toward a larger conversation about digital identity and emotional respect.
A practical piece of advice for anyone in a similar situation is to proactively secure one’s digital presence, using alternate contact details or updating security settings and to recognize that repeated disregard for boundaries often says more about the other person’s behavior than it does about your worth.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
These Redditors backed petty revenge by changing or canceling reservations and perks





This group shared long-term email mix-ups that exposed alarming personal data






























These commenters cheered clever misdirection to stop wrong-number abuse for good












This group agreed that misdirected rewards or points are fair game













![Woman Uses Stranger’s Kohl’s Cash After She Refuses To Stop Using Her Email [Reddit User] − Yes, I'm the guy who uses all the rewards points from 867-5309 at the gas station.](https://dailyhighlight.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/wp-editor-1769003408348-14.webp)
What started as a harmless email mix-up slowly became a lesson in digital boundaries, personal responsibility, and consequences that finally landed where words didn’t.
Many readers sympathized with the Redditor’s choice, while others wondered if spending the rewards crossed an invisible line, even after years of warnings.
So what do you think? Was using the Kohl’s Cash a fair response to repeated disregard, or should digital mix-ups always be handled with restraint? And if someone keeps borrowing your identity online, how far is too far? Drop your takes below; we know this one hits close to home.










