Stories: Are you crazy?

I’m 58, and that afternoon I simply wanted a new dress.

Nothing dramatic. Just something soft blue to wear to my book club’s spring dinner.

At the register stood a young girl—maybe twenty—leaning against the counter, loudly chatting on her phone. Every other word was a curse. Customers exchanged glances, but no one said anything.

I cleared my throat politely. “Excuse me, dear. Could I try this in a size up?”

She sighed like I’d asked her to climb a mountain. Without even looking at me, she muttered into the phone, “Hold on. Another one here…”

I felt my cheeks warm but kept my tone calm. “I’d appreciate it if you wouldn’t speak about me like that.”

That’s when she snapped.

“I have the right to refuse service! That dress? Let’s be real—it would’ve suited you forty years ago. Leave.”

The words hit harder than I expected. Forty years ago.

I stood there, stunned. I’d raised three children, survived breast cancer, buried my husband, and built a small accounting business from my kitchen table. And somehow, in her eyes, I was just… old.

“I’d like to speak to your manager,” I said quietly.

She rolled her eyes and turned away. When I lifted my phone to record her behavior—mostly out of disbelief—she stormed around the counter and snatched it from my hands.

“Are you crazy?” she barked.

Before I could respond, a calm voice spoke from behind me.

“I don’t think she is.”

We both turned.

A tall woman in a tailored blazer stood there, arms crossed. I recognized her instantly—Claire, one of my long-time clients. I’d helped her organize her finances when she first opened her chain of boutiques.

Including this one.

Claire looked at the young employee. “You have exactly ten seconds to explain why you’re grabbing a customer’s phone.”

The girl’s face drained of color. “I—I didn’t know—”

“You didn’t need to know,” Claire replied evenly. “Basic respect isn’t optional.”

Within minutes, the store manager was called. The phone was returned to me with shaking hands. The young woman was dismissed on the spot.

Claire turned to me gently. “Marianne, I am so sorry. You’ve supported my business for years.”

I smiled. “I only asked for a different size.”

“Well,” she said, linking her arm through mine, “today you’re getting more than that.”

She personally helped me find a dress—elegant, modern, nothing like what I’d chosen before. When I stepped out of the fitting room, she beamed.

“See?” she said. “Style doesn’t expire.”

I caught my reflection in the mirror.

She was right.

The dress wasn’t for who I used to be.

It was for exactly who I am now.

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