A giant snowman in Kentucky was built on top of a stump, but a driver who attempted to run a vehicle into it didn't realize that, according to a series of social media posts.

Petersburg, Kentucky resident Cody Lutz built the snowman with help from his fiancée and soon-to-be sister-in-law, Lutz told USA TODAY on Wednesday.

Lutz documented the snowman's completion on Facebook on Sunday, initially calling the snowman "Hugh J. Snowman" as he shared a photo of it towering over its three creators. Since then, he said he's edited the name, calling it simply "Frosty."

The snowman has a big smile on its face and its stick arms are cheerfully raised. Obscured by its massive lowest snowball: the tree trunk supporting the rest of the body.

On Monday, Lutz shared another Facebook post — this time, with tire tracks leading to the snowman. The lower third of Frosty was partially smashed, exposing the tree trunk.

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It appeared that someone had tried to run a vehicle into the cheerful snow sculpture.

"What they didn’t count on, is the massive stump in the center. Life is hard, but it’s much harder when you’re stupid," he wrote.

In an interview with Fox 19, Lutz said the driver likely learned a valuable lesson: "The irony is pretty funny," he said with a laugh. "Instant karma ... what goes around comes around goes around, in good ways and bad ways."

Later, Lutz clarified in a social media post that as a Christian he does not believe in Karma. He prefers to say that you "reap what you sow."

Lutz said that he grew up in western New York and is used to the snow. But the snow was special for his fiancée, who grew up in Mississippi and currently still lives there, he said — it was the most she had ever seen.

Lutz didn't call the police about the incident and just hopes whoever did the deed learned a lesson out of the experience, he told USA TODAY.

As of Wednesday Frosty was "still standing and still smiling," Lutz said. The stump is also okay.