I’d always been taught to respect adults, but nobody had taught me what to do when adults didn’t respect each other. When I heard my mom’s boss making fun of her thrift store clothes, I decided some lessons couldn’t wait for adulthood.
Growing up with just my mom and me meant we were a team. She was captain and MVP rolled into one, and I was her biggest fan.
My mom worked as a secretary at RSD Financial, a job she’d held since before I was born. Every morning, she’d iron her clothes with precision, apply her makeup carefully, and head out with a smile that hid how tired she really was.
“Liam, there’s dinner in the fridge,” she’d say, kissing my forehead before leaving. “And don’t forget your math homework!”
We weren’t rich by any means. Our apartment was small, and most of my clothes came from the same thrift stores where Mom found her professional outfits.
But I never felt like I was missing anything, because she somehow made magic happen on a secretary’s salary.
On my 13th birthday, she surprised me with the laptop I’d been eyeing for months.
“How did you afford this?” I asked in disbelief.
She winked. “I’ve been saving a little each week since last year. Your grades deserve it.”
What I didn’t know then was that she’d picked up weekend filing work to make it happen.
That’s who my mom was. Someone who gave everything and asked for nothing. She’d work ten-hour days, come home, help with my homework, then stay up late handling bills or mending clothes.
I’d sometimes find her asleep at the kitchen table, calculator and budget notebook still open.
“Mom, you should rest more,” I’d tell her.
She’d just smile. “I’ll rest when you’re in college, kiddo.”
I thought everything was fine in our lives. Sure, money was tight, but we managed. Mom never complained, and I tried not to either.
We were a good team.
Until the day I overheard her talking to Grandma on the phone.
I was heading to the kitchen for a snack when I heard her voice. She sounded different.
She was in her bedroom with the door nearly closed, just a sliver of light escaping into the hallway.
“I don’t know how much longer I can take it, Mom,” she was saying, her voice catching. “Today, he made a joke about my blazer in front of everyone. Said I look like a joke in my thrift store clothes… that I should be grateful I even have a job.”
She was crying. My mom, whom I’d seen cry maybe twice in my life, was sobbing into the phone.
“No, I can’t quit. You know I can’t. There aren’t other jobs that pay this well with my qualifications, and with Liam’s college fund to think about…”
I stood frozen and forgot about my hunger. My chest felt tight, like something was squeezing my heart.
“He said if I wanted to be treated like a professional, I should dress like one, not like I’m ‘digging through clearance bins.'” She paused. “But I am digging through clearance bins, Mom. What else am I supposed to do?”
I felt my fists clench. I didn’t even know this man, but in that moment, I hated him. How dare he make my mom feel this way?
That night at dinner, I watched her more carefully. The slight slump in her shoulders I hadn’t noticed before. The way she kept tucking her hair behind her ear.
“Mom?” I finally asked. “Is everything okay at work?”
She looked startled, then quickly composed herself. “Of course, honey. Why do you ask?”
“I… I heard you on the phone earlier. Talking to Grandma.”
Her face fell slightly before she recovered with a smile that didn’t reach her eyes. “Oh, that was nothing. Just a rough day. Every job has those.”
“But your boss… he said things about your clothes?”
She sighed, setting down her fork. “Liam, in the adult world, sometimes people say unkind things. It doesn’t matter.”
“Why do you let him talk to you like that?”
She just smiled and said, “Because sometimes being strong means staying silent. But don’t worry, honey. I’m fine.”
“One day,” I said, “I’ll make him regret treating you like this.”
She laughed and ruffled my hair. “Promise me you won’t do anything silly, okay?”
I promised. But I lied.