So he snapped at her, informing her that his wife had passed away, and she should mind her own business and leave. Other people stared at them after the man yelled at the lady. He quickly grabbed his bag and walked out of the store with his baby in the stroller.
While loading his things in the car, the same lady approached him in the parking lot. She said she was sorry about his wife’s death and felt he shouted at her unnecessarily. He described how he felt:
“I really didn’t wanna get into it anymore I just told her to get the hell out of my way and leave me alone.”
After reaching home and calming his baby, he thought about what happened at the grocery earlier.
He wondered if he had overreacted, so he wrote a Reddit post, asking other people if he was at fault. Buttercup303 assured OP he wasn’t at fault. She explained that people generally make judgments instead of trying to help.
She shared that she was a widow and had seen people apologizing after learning about her late husband. Meanwhile, another Redditor named lemon_peace_tea replied:
“People definitely should not be so nosy about a child crying.”
The Redditor felt sorry for OP’s loss and encouraged him to take care of his child by sharing that her father also cared for his children in the best possible way. She felt he wasn’t at fault for yelling at the unknown lady.
ocvagabond, a father raising two children singlehandedly, shared that he experienced similar scenarios when he stepped out with his children in public. He confessed it was always older women who tried to teach him how to take care of his kids. One day, a lady came up to him while he was holding his crying child.
She asked him if he wanted her to calm him down. He immediately told her to leave, wondering how she thought about carrying a stranger’s kid. Most users thought OP wasn’t at fault.
They believed the lady was unnecessarily poking her nose into his business, and he did the right thing by yelling at her.
