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Wedding Woes

She clearly FELT harassed

Dear Prudence, 

I work at a local garden nursery, and I recently witnessed an interaction between a customer and a regular that left me unsure about whether I should have stepped in. One of our regulars, an older man who knows a lot about gardening, was chatting with me and a co-worker near the register when a woman walked in. She went straight to the shelves, grabbed a seed-starting item, and headed for checkout. As she approached, the man casually asked, “Starting some seeds?” His tone was friendly. He was just making conversation.

The woman barely looked at him and muttered, “Yep,” in a cold, uninterested tone. She exaggeratedly stepped around him, as if he was physically in her way, which he wasn’t at all. He was just standing there, the same as before. Still, he didn’t seem offended and followed up with, “Can I give you some advice?” Again, his tone was polite, and given his knowledge, I figured he probably had something useful to share. But the woman cut him off with a sharp, “No, thank you,” her voice clipped and dismissive, like she couldn’t believe he dared to speak to her. The man looked surprised but just said, “Oh, OK,” and didn’t press the issue. After that, the whole store went awkwardly silent. I rang her up quickly, and she left without another word, clearly irritated.

I understand that not everyone wants unsolicited advice, but he wasn’t pushy or rude. He was just being friendly, and she acted like he was harassing her. It was so unnecessarily hostile that I felt bad for him. At the same time, I didn’t know if I should have said anything—maybe lightened the mood or reassured him afterward. Should I have stepped in somehow? If so, what would have been the right way to handle it?

—Unsure and Uneasy

Re: She clearly FELT harassed

  • Did she ask for advice?  Did she ask for interaction from a stranger?  No.  Leave her alone, let her buy her seeds, and go back to your conversation.  

    I don't hate Men, but when I tell you I've decentered them and refuse to do one millisecond of emotional labor for or have any interest in them, that doesn't even really begin to cover how tired of Men I am.  He overreached, she made her boundary clear, and OP you want to step in where/how exactly?  Tell her that she should be nicer or smile?  Leave her alone, that's exactly what she wanted.
  • ei34ei34 member
    Knottie Warrior 2500 Comments 500 Love Its 5 Answers
    I'd love to know what OP would have said to "help" the situation if they'd stepped in.  The woman set a boundary with a non-employee at a store and that's that.
  • I would have reacted verbatim the same way as that woman. 1)I dont' know you, so the man being a "regular" means nothing to me 2) if I have questions I will ask a store employee 3) If i do not have questions, I will not ask 

    F all these people, i'm so annoyed
  • This guy may have been perfectly nice.  But just because you ARE doesn't mean that it needs to be heard.

    And this woman wasn't in the mood. 
  • Here's what you could have said: "Please stop bothering customers. Any idiot could see that she wasn't interested in your opinion." 
  • Here's what you could have said: "Please stop bothering customers. Any idiot could see that she wasn't interested in your opinion." 
    Yup.   The mansplaining/parenting overhelpful isn't what people want.

    AND if you didn't stop it you're going to ensure that person tells some friends that there's an annoying dude there who wouldn't STFU and leave people alone. 
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