My mom spent 18 years working at the same little bakery in our town. Everyone knew her. Everyone loved her. They called her “The Cookie Lady.” She never missed a shift, always stayed late, and treated customers like family.
One cold, rainy night, she handed two leftover muffins and a bag of bread to a homeless man standing behind the shop. Food that was going into the trash anyway.
The next morning, the new manager — a guy named Derek — fired her on the spot.
“Company policy,” he said with a smirk, as she stood there in her flour-dusted apron, holding back tears.
She came home devastated. I was just a kid, but I never forgot the look on her face.
Life goes on… but some wounds stay open.
Fast-forward 10 years.
I run a fast-growing food-tech company now — dozens of employees, strong investors, and a reputation my mother is proud of. We were hiring an operations manager… and guess whose résumé showed up?
Derek.
And the wild part?
He didn’t recognize my name. He didn’t recognize me at all.
So I invited him for an interview.
He walked in wearing the same fake-confident smile he used on my mom that day. He bragged about his “leadership experience” and “tough decision-making.” He talked about firing people “to maintain standards.”
I let him talk.
When he finished, I looked him straight in the eyes and said:
“You once fired an employee for giving leftover food to a homeless man. That woman was my mother.”
His entire face drained of color.
I closed his résumé, slid it back across the table, and said:
“We don’t hire people who mistake cruelty for professionalism.”
He tried to stammer out excuses, but I stood up and opened the door for him.
That was the day I finally gave my mom the justice she never got.