I’ve been a nurse for six years now. Long shifts, aching feet, barely enough time to eat
—but I love it. It’s the one place where I feel like I truly matter.
Nobody cares what I look like, just that I do my job well.
But today? Today threw me back to a time I’d rather forget.
I walked into the ER room with my chart, barely glancing at the name.
“Alright, let’s see what we got—” Then I looked up. Robby Langston.
He was sitting on the bed, wincing as he held his wrist, but when he saw me,
his eyes went wide. For a second, I thought maybe he didn’t recognize me.
But then he did a quick, awkward glance at my face—at my nose—and I knew.
Middle school, high school… he made my life hell. “Big Becca,” “Toucan Sam,”
all the creative ways to make a girl hate her own reflection. I spent years wishing
I could shrink, disappear, be anyone else. But here I was, standing in scrubs,
holding his chart, and he was the one needing me.
“Becca?” His voice was hesitant, almost nervous. “Wow, uh… it’s been a while.”
I kept my face neutral. “What happened to your wrist?”
“Basketball injury,” he muttered. “Just a sprain, I think.”