My coworker – a new mom – keeps missing shifts cause “the baby kept me up.” Sunday, 6 AM, she texted: “You’re single, so you have time. Cover me.” I said, “Sorry, your time isn’t more valuable just cause you’re a mom!” No reply. Next day, I arrived at work and froze as I saw her sitting in the break room, tears running down her face.
She wasn’t just upset—she looked broken. Her uniform was wrinkled, and her eyes were bloodshot. I stood awkwardly at the door, unsure what to say. She looked up, startled, then quickly wiped her face and tried to smile.
“Morning,” she said softly, trying to pull herself together.
I nodded and made a beeline for the coffee machine. My chest was tight. Guilt crawled its way up my spine. I wasn’t sure why—after all, I had every right to say no. I’d worked four shifts in a row, and just because I didn’t have a baby at home didn’t mean I wasn’t tired too.
But something about seeing her like that… it messed with me.
The rest of the shift was weird. She barely spoke. No small talk. No eye contact. And the others noticed too. By noon, I overheard Jason whispering to another coworker, “She finally cracked, huh?”
Around 1 PM, she disappeared. I assumed she was on break, but then our manager, Carlos, came out of the office looking concerned.
“Has anyone seen Mel?”
Everyone shrugged.
“Okay… if she comes back, let me know,” he said, walking back to the office.
Something about the way he said it made me uneasy.
That night, I couldn’t sleep. Her face kept popping into my mind. The tears, the silence, the exhaustion. I felt bad. Really bad. I wasn’t cruel, but maybe I was too harsh.
The next morning, I texted her. Just a simple: “Hey, hope you’re okay.” No response. A few hours later, Carlos called me into his office.
“Close the door,” he said.
I sat down, heart pounding.
“Mel called me late last night. She’s taking a leave. Personal reasons,” he said. “You worked with her a lot. Everything okay between you two?”
I hesitated. “Yeah, I mean… she asked me to cover Sunday, I said no. That’s it.”
Carlos gave me a look that felt like he saw through me. “You sure?”
I nodded, though I wasn’t sure about anything anymore.
That night, I couldn’t get her out of my head. I scrolled through my phone, found her Instagram. It was mostly pictures of her baby—tiny, adorable, always smiling. One post from two months ago caught my eye: “Some days are heavy, but holding him makes it all worth it.”
I stared at that caption for way too long.
The next few weeks, we managed without her. Everyone picked up a little slack, grumbled a bit, but we made it work. I kept thinking about reaching out again but didn’t. I figured if she needed space, the last thing she wanted was a coworker who once told her she didn’t have special time privileges.
One rainy Thursday, about three weeks later, I walked into the store and saw her again. She looked different—less tired, but also somehow distant.
She gave a small smile. “Hey.”
“Hey,” I replied. There was a long pause before I added, “It’s good to see you.”
“You too.”
We didn’t say more, but that quiet exchange was… something. A start.
Later that day, we ended up doing stock together in the back room. I tried to break the silence.
“How’s the baby?”
Her eyes softened. “He’s good. Growing fast. Didn’t even fit in his newborn clothes last week.”
I smiled. “That’s good.”
Another pause. Then she sighed.
“Look… I’m sorry I kept bailing. I was drowning, and I didn’t know how to ask for help without sounding like a burden.”
That hit harder than I expected.
“I’m sorry too,” I said. “I was just so tired myself, and I snapped. I didn’t think… I mean, I didn’t know what you were going through.”
She nodded, eyes shiny again.
“Truth is, I wasn’t just tired. I had postpartum depression. I didn’t know it then. I thought I was just failing. Every day, I’d hear him cry and feel like I couldn’t breathe. And when I came back to work, it felt like I had to pretend I was okay so no one would think I was weak.”
I didn’t know what to say. I just listened.
She continued, “That morning you said no? I cried for an hour. Not because you were wrong. But because it reminded me I wasn’t coping like everyone else.”
I swallowed hard. “Mel… I didn’t know.”
She smiled sadly. “It’s okay. Most people don’t.”
That conversation changed something in me.
I started noticing more. Like how the teen cashier kept rubbing her wrists like she was anxious. Or how the older janitor always stayed late even when he didn’t have to—maybe just to have somewhere to go. Everyone was carrying something.
Over the next few weeks, I made an effort. Tiny things. I’d cover a shift now and then. I brought coffee for coworkers when I could. I started asking how people were—and actually waited for the answer.
Mel came back part-time, then full-time. And she was different too. Stronger. Not just smiling for show. We started talking more. Sharing baby stories—even though I didn’t have one, she loved telling them.
Then, one Friday, she asked if I wanted to stop by her place. “We’re having a few friends over. Nothing big.”
I hesitated, then said yes.
Her apartment was cozy, baby toys scattered everywhere. Her husband was kind, her baby adorable. It felt… warm.
At one point, Mel pulled me aside.
“I never got to say thank you. Not for saying no that day—but for caring after. For listening.”
I laughed. “I was kind of a jerk.”
“You were human. That counts.”
Later that night, I walked home in the cool air, feeling something I hadn’t felt in a while. Connected.
A few months passed. Then, something happened that brought the whole thing full circle.
Carlos got sick. He was older, always full of energy, but suddenly he was out for surgery, then recovery. The place was chaos without him.
Mel and I stepped up. Unofficially, we started running things—scheduling, helping new hires, keeping the place afloat.
One night, as we were closing up, Mel said, “Crazy how things turn out, huh? We started barely speaking, now we’re running the show.”
I smiled. “Life’s weird like that.”
She looked at me seriously. “You helped me more than you know.”
And then—twist of fate—Carlos decided to retire early. Health stuff, family priorities. He called us into the office on his last day.
“I’m recommending you two as co-managers,” he said. “You balance each other out. You care. That’s what matters.”
We stared at him, stunned.
Mel blinked. “Wait—both of us?”
He nodded. “No one knows this place like you two. I trust you.”
When we stepped outside, Mel turned to me. “Co-managers. Can you believe it?”
I shook my head. “From ignoring each other to running the place. Wild.”
That night, I thought back to that 6 AM text. The one that felt so entitled at the time. And maybe it was. But behind it was a cry for help I didn’t see.
And maybe saying no was the right choice in the moment—but it was what happened after that mattered more.
We all snap sometimes. We all judge too quickly. But when we take the time to really see people—not just what they do, but what they carry—it changes things.
Mel wasn’t just “the mom who missed shifts.” She was a woman trying to survive. And I wasn’t just “the single one with time.” I was someone who needed to learn that compassion isn’t about covering shifts—it’s about showing up when it counts.
Now, every time someone new joins the team, Mel and I both make it a point to tell them: “If you’re struggling, tell someone. You’re not alone.”
Because sometimes, the smallest act of grace can change everything.
So if you’re reading this and there’s someone you’ve written off, maybe take a second look. We all need grace. And sometimes, we all need a second chance.
If this story moved you even a little, share it. You never know who might need to read it.




