A mysterious stranger intrudes into a man’s digital life, commandeering his email to place orders under a veil of anonymity. Though no private details are stolen, the repeated intrusion stirs a quiet tension, a puzzle wrapped in confusion and unanswered calls.
Determined to reclaim control, the man turns each unwanted confirmation into a subtle act of defiance—rerouting deliveries miles away, reshaping the stranger’s plans without confrontation. Behind every email lies an untold story, a connection forged in silence and curiosity, waiting to unravel.

AITA for changing the package pickup each time someone uses my email for orders?











As renowned communication expert Dr. Sarah Davis explains, “Effective conflict resolution relies on clear, non-aggressive boundary setting; when those boundaries are repeatedly ignored, the response must escalate assertively, not punitively.”
This situation presents a classic conflict between minor administrative inconvenience and assertive boundary enforcement. The neighbor’s behavior—repeatedly using the wrong email and then refusing to fix the typo because it is ‘too much time’—demonstrates a significant lack of respect for the OP’s digital space and time. The OP initially attempted resolution through communication (texting/calling the number) and then escalated to passive resistance (redirecting deliveries). While redirecting packages successfully thwarted the immediate problem, it moved the action from boundary setting (refusing to engage with the emails) to active sabotage (interfering with the property/delivery process). This punitive response, while understandable given the frustration, risks escalating the conflict beyond email notifications into a potentially more serious dispute.
The OP’s actions, while stemming from understandable frustration, were an inappropriate escalation. A more constructive approach would have been to clearly state the boundary (e.g., ‘If you send one more order to my email, I will report the address as fraudulent to the shipping company,’ or simply ceasing all interaction with the emails without redirecting them). For the future, the OP should maintain a distance from the neighbor’s administrative errors, focusing only on ensuring no actual personal data is compromised, rather than actively managing the neighbor’s misplaced deliveries.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.



















The original poster (OP) is facing repeated, unwanted order confirmations due to a minor email address mix-up with another individual. Feeling inconvenienced and frustrated by the other person’s refusal to correct their consistent typo, the OP resorted to actively interfering with the delivery logistics, causing the packages to be redirected far away.
Is the OP justified in intentionally disrupting the deliveries as a response to the neighbor’s laziness and refusal to correct a simple typo, or did this action cross a line into unnecessary sabotage against a problem that could have been solved via simple communication?







