The Eggs, The Bologna, And The Truth

My ex showed up on my doorstep one day, after I’d kicked him out. He handed me a bag with a dozen eggs and a half-pound of bologna. Okay. I took it just to get him off my back. Imagine my surprise when I met a mutual friend the same day and he said, “I saw Alex today, he was bragging that he’d dropped off ‘groceries’ for you. Said you were lucky to still have someone like him checking in.”

I laughed, but it didn’t really reach my eyes. “Groceries?” I asked. “You mean the eggs and bologna?” Our friend, Devin, blinked at me. “Wait, that’s all he brought?” I nodded. “Well,” Devin said slowly, “he made it sound like he filled your fridge. Told me he dropped off two bags of stuff—milk, vegetables, chicken, even toilet paper.”

Now that got under my skin. Alex had always been like this. Making a big show of the smallest gestures, twisting the truth just enough to make himself look good. And me? I was always the “ungrateful one” in his version of events.

Later that night, I stared at the eggs in the fridge and the bologna beside them. I wasn’t sure if I should be annoyed or just amused. Maybe a little of both. Still, I was proud of myself for not saying much when he showed up. I was finally learning to stop giving energy to people who didn’t deserve it.

Two days later, I got a text from Alex. “Just checking if the food helped. You okay on groceries?” I didn’t reply. I was doing fine. My budget was tight, but manageable. I had picked up some shifts at the café down the street, and the tips were decent.

That weekend, I ran into Alex again—this time, unplanned. He was at the same gas station, filling up his car, and I had just come out with a bottle of water and some trail mix. He smiled like nothing had happened.

“Hey stranger,” he said.

“Hey,” I replied coolly, not stopping as I walked to my car.

“You get that job at the clinic you were talking about?” he asked, leaning on his car like he had all the time in the world.

“No,” I said. “Didn’t go through.”

“Too bad,” he shrugged. “I told you, you should’ve used my cousin’s name.”

I stared at him, trying to keep calm. “I didn’t want a job handed to me out of pity.”

He grinned. “Not pity. It’s called networking. Something you’re too proud to do.”

That was always his problem. He saw people as tools. Not relationships. Not human beings. Just connections and favors and leverage. It’s how he made it through life—always cutting corners, always playing someone.

I drove away that day with my hands shaking, not from anger but from clarity. I had spent nearly three years of my life trying to make things work with someone who thought that dropping off a bag of eggs made him a hero.

The next week, I got a call from the café manager, Tessa. “Can you come in early tomorrow?” she asked. “We’re short one and you’re the only one I trust to handle the rush.”

I said yes without hesitation.

That morning, I was pouring coffee when a woman I didn’t recognize walked in. She looked tired, the kind of tired that wasn’t just from lack of sleep but from life itself.

She ordered a black coffee and sat in the corner, pulling out a small notebook. Every now and then, she looked up and watched people. I refilled her coffee without charging her. She smiled, surprised. “Thank you.”

“No problem,” I said. “You look like you’ve had a day.”

She laughed quietly. “A month, actually. Maybe a year.”

We didn’t talk more, but when she left, she folded a five-dollar bill under the napkin with a small note: Kindness matters. Thank you for yours.

That simple exchange reminded me why I’d left Alex. I didn’t want to live in a world where gestures came with strings attached. I wanted peace. Real connection. The kind that didn’t need to be documented or bragged about.

Two weeks passed. I picked up more shifts, started freelancing part-time doing design work online. My days were full, but not heavy. I was building something for myself, even if it was slow.

Then one morning, Devin messaged me again. “Hey, weird thing. I heard Alex is telling people you two are working things out. Is that true?”

I nearly spit out my tea. “Absolutely not. Haven’t even texted him back.”

Devin replied with a screenshot from someone’s Instagram story. It was Alex at a barbecue, beer in hand, telling a group of people, “She and I are reconnecting. I gave her time, space. Now she sees what she lost.”

I wanted to scream. But I didn’t. I posted a quiet little photo that day—me, holding a coffee cup at the café, with the caption: Peace tastes better than drama ever did.

That evening, Alex called. I didn’t answer. He sent a voice note.

“You’re making me look like an idiot,” he said, his voice cold. “I’ve been trying to help you, and this is what I get? Petty social media posts?”

I deleted it. I didn’t owe him a reaction.

A week later, karma came knocking—but not in the way I expected.

Devin called me again. “You’re not gonna believe this. Alex just got fired.”

“What?” I blinked.

“Yeah. His manager found out he was listing fake references on client reports. Apparently one of them called in to verify and it unraveled everything.”

I didn’t feel happy about it. But I also didn’t feel sorry. This was the guy who once told me, proudly, “Rules are for people without charm.”

That’s when I realized something deeper. People don’t always change when you want them to. Sometimes they don’t change at all. But life has a way of catching up.

Three days later, I saw Alex again—this time at the supermarket. He looked… smaller. Not physically. Just—less full of himself.

He walked past me and gave a nod. No grin. No comment. No pretending.

It felt like closure.

Back at home, I made eggs and toast. The same eggs from that ridiculous day he showed up. The bologna was long gone, tossed after it started to smell funny.

I sat down at the table, looked at the warm plate, and laughed to myself. That “gift” he brought? It ended up feeding me, sure. But not in the way he expected.

It became a reminder.

A symbol of how low the bar had been. And how far I’d come since then.

A month after that, the café brought me on as assistant manager. Tessa said it was obvious I cared—about the people, the work, the vibe. I felt seen. For the first time in a long while, I felt capable.

I also got an email from the clinic. The job I’d applied for? They re-opened the position and asked if I’d still be interested. Apparently, the candidate they chose backed out.

I said yes.

The interview was easy this time. I didn’t fake anything. I spoke about my work at the café, how I’d learned to listen to people better. I told the truth.

Two days later, I got the job.

And you know what I did after I signed the offer?

I walked to the corner store and bought a dozen eggs and a pack of bologna.

I gave them to the first person I saw sitting outside with a sign asking for food.

No speeches. No announcements. No texts afterward to anyone.

Just kindness. Quiet and simple.

The way it should be.

A few months later, I bumped into Devin again. He asked if I’d heard anything new about Alex.

“No,” I said honestly. “And I don’t really care to.”

“Fair,” he nodded. “You seem… better.”

I smiled. “I am.”

He gave me a fist bump and said, “Proud of you.”

Funny how people start to notice your peace when you stop chasing chaos.

If you’ve ever had someone try to minimize your worth or use tiny gestures to manipulate your emotions—just know this: you’re not ungrateful. You’re not difficult. You’re just waking up.

Life will always hand you eggs and bologna moments—situations that feel silly, small, or even insulting. But they can still teach you. They can still push you toward something better.

Let them.

And if someone ever brags about doing the bare minimum for you? Let that be the last favor they ever do.

Because your peace isn’t earned by guilt. It’s built through boundaries.

Thanks for reading this far. If this story hit home for you, give it a like or share it with someone who might need the reminder: you deserve more than a bag of eggs and some old bologna.