My mom was a superhero in a thrift-store blazer. She worked tirelessly as a secretary, stretching every dollar to give me opportunities she never had.
Then, I overheard her sobbing to my grandma. Her boss, Richard, had mocked her clothes in front of coworkers, saying she “looked like a joke.”
I couldn’t unhear it.
When the company’s awards dinner rolled around, Mom didn’t want to go. “I don’t belong there,” she said. But I knew she did—so I convinced her, then set my plan in motion.
With help from Richard’s daughter, Zoe, I got proof of his cruelty—recordings of him belittling Mom. At the dinner, as he accepted a leadership award, we played them for the entire room.
The crowd gasped. I stood up. “This is the woman you’re insulting,” I said. “The one who keeps this company running.”
Richard’s face went white. Then—in front of everyone—he knelt and apologized.
A week later, Mom got a promotion.
She still shops at thrift stores. But now, she does it with a smile—because she knows respect isn’t bought. It’s earned.
And Richard? He learned that lesson the hard way.