
At the small grocery store where I worked, things were usually calm — until one afternoon, when a furious woman stormed in, dragging her young son behind her. She marched up to my register and exploded over us being out of organic apples. Her yelling drew the attention of the whole store. I stayed calm,
but her threats and insults stung — especially with her nervous little boy watching. Just as she turned to storm out, she slammed straight into the malfunctioning automatic doors, stunning everyone into silence.Red-faced and rattled, she stood frozen. But before she could lash out again, her son tugged on her sleeve and said, softly but clearly, “Mom, you were mean to that cashier lady. You should say sorry.”
The entire store seemed to hold its breath. Her face changed for a moment — like she might actually apologize — but then pride took over. She muttered something, grabbed her son’s hand, and left without a word. As the doors closed behind her,
the tension melted away. My manager came over to check on me, and I went back to work. But I couldn’t stop thinking about that brave little boy. Maybe he didn’t change his mom, but he reminded everyone else what kindness looks like — even in a grocery store aisle.