Man Screamed, ‘If You Can’t Afford a Baby, Maybe Don’t Have One!’ at a Sobbing Nurse at a Grocery Store – And My Life Took a Sharp Turn After That

79

When a young nurse couldn’t pay for a can of formula at the store, a man in line behind me said, “If you can’t afford a baby, maybe don’t have one.” I immediately stepped forward to pay for the formula. I didn’t know I’d set a series of events in motion that would only become clear days later.

I went to the grocery store for a pack of lightbulbs and nothing else.

It was meant to be a quick trip, but once I joined the checkout queue, my day took an unexpected turn.

There were two people in line ahead of me: a man buying motor oil and beef jerky, and a young woman in wrinkled blue scrubs holding a can of hypoallergenic baby formula.

I noticed her because she looked like she might fall over.

The cashier scanned the formula, and the nurse slid her card in.

The machine beeped.

“Card declined,” the cashier said gently.

The nurse stared at the cashier in disbelief.

“No, that has to be a mistake. I just finished my shift. Can I try again, please?”

The cashier ran the card a second time.

Beep.

Declined.

The man behind me let out a cruel laugh.

“If you can’t afford a baby, maybe don’t have one.”

He said it loudly enough that half the front end of the store heard him.

The nurse flinched. Tears welled up in her eyes.

Nobody spoke, but the atmosphere grew tense. That’s the worst thing about public cruelty — that moment when everybody waits to see whether it belongs there.

The man kept going.

“Seriously,” he said.

“Some of us have places to be. This isn’t a charity line.”

The nurse’s gaze darted toward the cashier, then down to the formula.

“I’m sorry,” she whispered.

“I’ll just… put it back.”

That was my breaking point. Something old and long-buried awoke inside me.

I had seen that same silence before, the way decent people freeze when ugliness enters a room like it owns the place.

“Leave it,” I said.

The nurse turned. The cashier did too.

I stepped forward, set my lightbulbs on the counter, and slid my card toward the reader.

“Run it with mine.”

The cashier nodded.

The man behind me scoffed. “Great. Another one who thinks he’s saving the world.”

I turned to look at him.

At 73, I don’t turn fast.

My knees complain, and my back negotiates, but I wanted to see that man’s face when I told him what I thought of his bad attitude.

He was maybe in his 50s, with a nice haircut, and he was vaguely familiar, though I couldn’t say why.

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