The Toddler On The Trip Changed Everything

My coworker and I had to travel to visit the different branches. But she couldn’t find a sitter so she brought her toddler with. The child is always crying and throwing tantrums. When I confronted her about it, she said she didn’t know what to do. So I rolled my eyes and went back to sending emails in the passenger seat.

We had six branches to check in on that week. From Monday to Saturday, all scheduled tightly with barely any room for error. I had imagined the trip going smoothly—us checking in, giving presentations, answering questions, then relaxing in a hotel with a hot tea and a good series to binge.

But from the minute I met up with her at the parking lot, I knew none of that was going to happen.

Her son, a three-year-old named Elias, was already screaming because she didn’t let him carry the backpack with her laptop inside. She tried to calm him with a half-eaten granola bar, but he slapped it out of her hand. I just stood there awkwardly, pretending to check my emails.

“Sorry,” she muttered, cheeks flushed. “He’s been really off since my mom left town last week. Usually, she watches him, but… things are tight right now.”

I gave a polite nod but didn’t say much. I wasn’t in the mood for drama or stories. I just wanted the trip to be over with.

The first day went as expected—exhausting. Elias refused to stay in his stroller or play with the toys his mom packed. He cried through most of the presentations and dropped his juice bottle on the floor three times. I offered to hold him once, but he screamed louder. My coworker, Dalia, looked like she was on the verge of tears more than once.

That night at the hotel, I knocked on her door because we had to finalize the report for that branch. She opened it holding Elias, who had peanut butter on his cheeks and was shirtless for some reason.

“I can come back later,” I said.

“No, it’s fine. He’s just… being him.”

She put him down, and he immediately ran to the curtains and tried to pull them down. Dalia caught him mid-jump.

I didn’t say anything, just opened my laptop and started typing. Eventually, she sat down beside me, out of breath.

“I know he’s a handful,” she said.

I nodded, still typing.

“I didn’t want to bring him,” she added, her voice quieter. “But I couldn’t afford to miss this trip. I need this job.”

I looked at her for the first time that day. Not just glanced—really looked. She had dark circles under her eyes and her hair was in a messy bun, not the stylish kind, but the kind born of desperation and no time. Her blouse had a stain I hadn’t noticed earlier. She looked tired in a way that sleep alone couldn’t fix.

“You don’t have any help at all?” I asked.

She shook her head. “His dad left when he was one. My mom helps when she can, but she had to fly to Texas for my aunt. It’s just me for now.”

I didn’t say anything. What could I say? I didn’t know her that well before this trip. Just that she joined last year and people said she was “trying her best.”

I went back to my room that night thinking about how lucky I was. My job paid well. I had no kids, no real responsibilities outside work, and no one waiting for me at home. Most days I saw that as a curse. That night, it felt like a strange kind of freedom.

The second day was worse. Elias threw up in the backseat. Dalia apologized a hundred times while scrubbing the seat with wet wipes and her own sweater. I stepped out of the car and called the branch to say we’d be late. I didn’t say why.

By the third day, something in me started to shift. Not because Elias got better—he didn’t. He threw his toy car at my laptop and nearly broke the screen. But in between his tantrums, there were moments. Little ones.

Like when he pointed out the window and said, “Birdie!” in a high-pitched voice that made me laugh despite myself.

Or when I gave him my pen during a meeting and he quietly drew squiggles on a notepad for twenty full minutes.

Or when he crawled onto my lap while Dalia was talking to a branch manager and fell asleep with his tiny hand gripping my sleeve.

I didn’t know what to do with those moments. I wasn’t used to kids. I always told myself I wasn’t a “kid person.” But Elias didn’t seem to care. He just… showed up in my space and made it his.

That night at dinner, I offered to carry him while Dalia ate. She blinked, surprised, but handed him over.

He was sticky, smelled like crayons and apple juice, and kept trying to grab my fork. But he made me laugh when he sang the ABCs backward. On purpose, I think.

“Thank you,” Dalia said suddenly.

“For what?”

“For not judging me today. Or him.”

I shrugged. “He’s got spirit.”

She smiled. “That’s one way to put it.”

The fourth day was when everything changed.

We were visiting a smaller branch outside the city. It was raining, and we had to park farther than usual. I offered to carry Elias under the umbrella while Dalia carried the laptop and presentation folder.

Halfway through the parking lot, I slipped on a wet patch. I didn’t fall completely, but I stumbled hard enough that Elias started crying in panic.

“Shhh, you’re okay, you’re okay,” I whispered, holding him tighter. My heart was racing.

Dalia ran over. “Is he hurt?”

I shook my head. “Just scared.”

She took him, but he reached back for me, arms stretched out.

And right there, in the rain, with people watching from the glass doors of the branch, something cracked open in me. I didn’t have a name for it, but it felt like warmth in the middle of the cold.

Later that afternoon, after the visit, I found myself sitting on the hotel floor building towers out of sugar packets with Elias. He kept knocking them over and laughing so hard he hiccupped.

“Why are you being nice to him now?” Dalia asked from the bed, half-smiling.

“I don’t know,” I said. “Maybe he grew on me.”

She nodded. “He does that.”

And then she added, “He’s never taken to anyone this fast. Not even his uncle.”

I didn’t know how to respond to that.

The fifth day brought a twist I didn’t see coming.

We were at the fifth branch, running late again. Dalia looked pale all morning but insisted she was fine. During the Q&A, I noticed her swaying slightly. By the time we got to the car, she nearly collapsed.

“I’m fine,” she said again, brushing me off.

“No, you’re not.”

We drove straight to urgent care.

She had a severe infection. Dehydrated, feverish, and in no state to travel or present.

“They want to keep her overnight,” I told the receptionist at the hotel.

Elias was asleep in the backseat, cheeks flushed.

So I did the only thing I could. I took him with me.

That night was chaos. He woke up crying, missing his mom. I held him, sang to him (badly), let him sleep on my chest. I barely got any rest, but I didn’t care.

The next morning, I did something I never thought I’d do—I went to the last branch alone. With Elias.

I told them Dalia was unwell and I’d present both our parts. They offered to reschedule, but I insisted.

Elias sat on a chair in the corner, eating crackers and watching something on my phone. Every now and then he yelled, “Go, go, go!” when the cartoon car on screen raced ahead.

People laughed. They didn’t mind.

The presentation went better than expected. I was proud of myself. But more than that—I was proud of him.

When we got back to the hotel, Dalia was sitting up in bed, looking exhausted but relieved.

“He was a champ,” I said.

She teared up. “Thank you. I don’t know how to ever repay you.”

“You don’t have to.”

But she did, in a way.

The trip ended two days later. On the drive home, Elias slept most of the way, holding my hand from his car seat.

When we dropped them off, he hugged me tight around the neck.

“You come to my house?” he whispered.

I smiled. “Maybe one day.”

Three months later, that day came.

Dalia got promoted. I recommended her. I meant it.

She now heads a division and finally earns enough to afford part-time child care. But Elias still comes to the office sometimes.

Especially to see me.

He calls me “Tree” because he couldn’t pronounce my name right the first time, and it stuck.

Every now and then, I take him to the park. Or to get ice cream.

Last week, he drew a picture of us—me with big square glasses and him holding my hand. He wrote “Tree is my friend.”

I keep it on my fridge.

Looking back, I thought that trip would be a disaster. And in many ways, it was. But it also changed me.

It taught me patience. Compassion. That behind every tantrum is a tiny human trying to understand the world.

And that sometimes, the people who seem to be the biggest inconvenience… end up being the biggest blessing.

If you’re reading this and you’ve ever judged a parent too quickly, or thought a crying child was just “bad”—take a breath. You never know what someone’s carrying.

Sometimes, love comes disguised as chaos. Sometimes, healing shows up as a tiny sticky hand gripping your sleeve.

And sometimes, being a “kid person” doesn’t mean knowing what to do. It just means showing up anyway.

If this story moved you, made you smile, or reminded you of someone—share it. You never know who might need the reminder that kindness is never wasted.