I bring a homemade lunch to work. One day, a coworker saw my food and said, “What a disgusting smell!” I explained that I made it with lots of garlic. The next day, I found my food in the trash.
My blood boiled—it could only have been her. So I decided to test her patience, but not in the way you’d think.
Her name was Sandra. She always had something snarky to say about everyone. Her tone was never outright rude, but it dripped with judgment. She once called another colleague’s perfume “desperate” and mocked someone else for stuttering during a meeting.
I’m not one for office drama. I like to keep my head down, do my job, and go home. But tossing my food—that crossed a line. I didn’t spend my Sunday night batch cooking for someone to toss it like it was garbage.
So, I started bringing in different versions of garlic-heavy food. Garlic noodles, garlic chickpeas, roasted garlic soup, even black garlic risotto. Each day, I made it a little stronger than the last. If she had a problem with garlic, I’d give her something to really complain about.
To be honest, the reactions were mixed. Some coworkers avoided the break room, but others actually smiled. “That smells amazing,” said Jenna from accounting one day. “Reminds me of my grandma’s cooking.”
The support surprised me. I’d been expecting side eyes, maybe another food disappearance. Instead, I started getting questions—recipes, tips, even a few people asking if I could bring extra next time.
Sandra, of course, was fuming. She didn’t say anything the first few days, but on Thursday, she snapped. “Why do you have to bring that stinky food in here? It’s gross. It’s unprofessional!”
I looked at her, spoon halfway to my mouth, and said calmly, “This is my culture. Garlic is a big part of my family’s cooking. You throwing it away wasn’t just disrespectful—it was cruel.”
Her mouth twitched, but she said nothing and stormed out. I didn’t follow.
Later that day, I was called into HR. Apparently, Sandra had complained that I was “creating a hostile environment” by bringing in “smelly food on purpose.” I thought I was going to be reprimanded—but instead, the HR rep looked annoyed.
“I’ve seen the reports,” she said. “You’ve never had any issues until this person joined. We’ve received more than one complaint about her behavior.” She leaned forward. “We’re investigating this, but in the meantime, please don’t change your lunch. You have every right to bring food from home.”
I left that meeting with shaky legs and a weird sense of pride. I hadn’t done anything cruel or petty. I just stood my ground.
But that’s not where the story ends.
A week later, we had a team-building potluck. Everyone had to bring something. Sandra showed up with a tray of dry-looking store-bought wraps. She looked around at the spread of colorful, homemade dishes—Biryani, lasagna, jerk chicken, tabbouleh, pierogies—and you could see her face fall.
People barely touched her tray.
Meanwhile, my roasted garlic hummus was gone in ten minutes.
Something shifted after that. Sandra got quieter, less bold. I found out later that HR had formally warned her. Apparently, the food incident wasn’t her only offense. She’d belittled another coworker’s accent in a Zoom call the week before.
Here’s where the twist comes in.
One afternoon, months later, I found her sitting alone in the break room, staring at her phone. Her eyes were red. She looked up and quickly wiped her face.
I didn’t want to ask. I really didn’t.
But I did.
“You okay?”
She hesitated. Then, in the quietest voice I’d ever heard from her, she said, “My dad passed away last night. He was the one who cooked. Ever since he died, I’ve been… thinking about how much I miss sitting in his kitchen. He used to use garlic in everything.”
I felt a weird ache in my chest.
She didn’t say sorry for the food thing. Not then. But I nodded and slid the extra hummus I’d brought across the table.
She took it.
The next day, she brought a small container of something. It smelled faintly of roasted vegetables and garlic.
“This was his recipe,” she muttered, setting it next to mine. “I figured… I don’t know. I should stop acting like a brat.”
I didn’t say anything right away. Just took a bite. It was good. A little too salty, but good.
And that’s how things started to shift.
We weren’t suddenly best friends. It wasn’t a magical movie moment. But we did start talking more like humans and less like enemies. She stopped making those biting comments. She started helping out more around the office. Slowly, other people warmed up to her too.
Months passed. We ended up working together on a project that actually went really well. She had good ideas—she just used to bury them under a layer of insecurity and sarcasm.
Eventually, she did apologize. She said she’d been bitter because she felt out of place, like she wasn’t good enough to be there. Said it made her feel better to tear others down.
That doesn’t excuse what she did. But it explained a lot.
By the end of the year, she’d become one of the most improved people in the office. Still blunt, still intense—but way more self-aware. And more importantly, respectful.
I learned something through all of this. Standing up for yourself doesn’t mean you have to stoop to someone else’s level. You don’t have to scream or fight dirty. Sometimes, you just have to show up, be yourself, and let the garlic do the talking.
And maybe… just maybe… the people who try to tear you down are dealing with their own battles. You don’t have to forgive them right away, but leaving space for growth can lead to something better than revenge.
So next time someone mocks what you bring to the table—literally or metaphorically—don’t hide it.
Own it.
It might just teach someone else a lesson they didn’t know they needed.
If this story gave you something to think about, go ahead and like and share it. You never know who might need the reminder today.





