I worked at a health-food store in the Chicago suburbs, and everyone hated the juice bar shift. People were cranky, entitled, and somehow always convinced their $6 smoothie turned them into royalty.
But nothing — nothing — prepared me for her.
She ordered a carrot juice. Simple. Basic. I made it exactly the same way we always did. I handed it to her with a smile.
She took one sip, stared at it…
and before I could react, she THREW IT IN MY FACE.
Cold, sticky juice dripping down my hair and shirt, and she snarled:
“TRY AGAIN.”
I froze. Not out of fear — out of pure disbelief that a grown adult behaved like a feral toddler.
My manager ran over, apologized to her, and began remaking the drink while I stood there, humiliated and soaking wet. She smirked at me the whole time like she’d just won a prize.
But she didn’t know who she was dealing with.
Because right there — right then — I decided she wasn’t getting away with it.
When my manager stepped away to grab a lid, I leaned over the counter, smiled sweetly, and said:
“You’re right. Let me make sure it’s perfect this time.”
I took the new cup, turned around like I was adding something special…
and I did.
Not anything gross — I would never do that.
But I grabbed the biggest, ugliest, most fibrous carrots we had. The ones we saved for compost because they jam the juicer and create a gritty, pulpy mess.
I shoved them through the machine until the juice was practically sludge — thick, bitter, impossible to drink.
Then I handed it to her with the kindest voice I could muster:
“Here you go! Fresh batch.”
She strutted out drinking it proudly…
and made it exactly halfway through the parking lot before she stopped, grimaced, and spat it all over the pavement.
I watched through the window as she gagged, confused, furious — but with no one to blame but herself.
Because this time, she couldn’t throw it in my face.
She’d already done that once.
And I promise you —
there was never a second time.