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Nurse Finds Out Her Coworkers Label Her by Her Body, Workplace Gets Tense Fast

by Sunny Nguyen
January 19, 2026
in Social Issues

One nurse thought she was blending in, then a coworker casually called her “Jessica with the nipples.”

That sentence alone could make anyone’s soul leave their body and file for a new identity.

The Redditor works as a hospital nurse who floats between floors, and she has one of those universally common names. The kind that appears on three different badges in the same hallway. So staff use little identifiers to keep people straight, hair color, height, department, whatever.

Except the “identifier” this nurse stumbled into had nothing to do with her job.

A new nurse, trying to sort out which Jessica she was talking to, asked if she knew the float pool Jessica “with the nipples.” The charge nurse’s eyes went wide. People started acting weird. Lunch turned into a cringe comedy special.

Suddenly, the Redditor realized her coworkers had quietly turned her body into a workplace label, and now she had to decide what to do with that information.

Do you shrug it off, buy thicker bras, and pretend it never happened? Or do you take it to HR and force the hospital to deal with a nickname that never should have existed?

Now, read the full story:

Nurse Finds Out Her Coworkers Label Her by Her Body, Workplace Gets Tense Fast
Not the actual photo

'WIBTA for going to HR about my secret nickname?'

Long story short, I’m a nurse at a hospital and I go to different floors as my job to help out. I have a pretty common name - think Jessica,...

there are several Nurses with my name throughout the hospital and sometimes multiple on the same floor.

Today I was working on a hall with a new nurse who didn’t know me yet. She commented on how it was weird that this floor had 3 Jessica’s on...

She asked me which one I was (I guess she thought I worked just on that floor) and I told her my last name.

Then she asked if I knew “Jessica with the nipples that works on float pool”. The charge nurse was near by and I noticed her eyes get kind of big...

I was confused for a minute bc id had never heard this description and as far as I knew I was the only Jessica in float pool.

It dawned on me that she was referring to me without knowing I am apparently “Jessica with the nipples.”

I guess this was just a known thing about me? Cause that nurse avoided me like the plague all day and so did everyone else.

The charge nurse tried to make it into a joke with me at lunch and I laughed to hide my embarrassment but I am mortified.

I had noticed my nipples sparingly in the bathroom mirror and thought it was just a rare thing when cold.

I guess my nipples show thru my sports bra and scrubs on a regular enough basis that it’s become my secret identifier.

I told a friend I was thinking about going to HR about this but they said it was obviously a harmless identifier

that I was never suppose to find out about so it should have been no harm no foul - the same as “Jessica with red hair” etc.

I feel like it is not harmless though to use an identifier that is so embarrassing and made me the b__t of jokes.

I think I could be the AH because I don’t know what HR would do and what if it is too extreme? I don’t want anyone fired.

ETA: Holy moly I did not expect so many comments! Thank you for all of the NTA judgements and advice.

I don’t think I’ll be able to reply to everyone cause you know, life, but I’m reading it all and considering!

I’ll try to post an update at the end of my post once I make a decision on what to do.

Eta2: Hey guys. Not sure if Reddit gives you a notification about updates to posts you comment on but here is what I’ve decided since I posted this.

First, much to my shame, I am a very non-confrontational person so I did not confront anyone.

Due to this, I also decided not to go to HR despite the overwhelming response telling me to here.

After thinking about it for a day I decided there wasn’t much that HR would be able to do without just causing me further embarrassment and making the whole work...

I came home to some new bras my hubby bought me that fit all the criteria i wanted for bras but I just hadn’t looked very hard previously.

He got me a size up from what i already had and they turned out even more comfortable! I’m currently not talking to my friend I’d mentioned

bc he was really insensitive and even brought up a time from our teen years where someone untied my top in the lake

and everyone got a great look at my “pepperoni nipples” when I came out of the water.

I also put in some new applications to local places for a new job and hope to be leaving this place soon.

Thanks for all the input! Sorry I couldn’t respond much between work and family once I got home.I felt my face heat up just reading that. Workplace embarrassment hits differently, because you still have to clock in tomorrow and pretend you never heard what you heard. This nurse didn’t walk into the hospital expecting to become a walking punchline, yet a random coworker used her body as a name tag.

The part that really sticks is the charge nurse trying to turn it into a lunch joke. That tells you this nickname didn’t live in one person’s head. It lived in the culture.

Then the “you were never supposed to find out” friend arrived like a bad HR training video. People hide things they know are wrong. Nobody whispers “harmless identifiers.”

You can also feel how trapped OP felt. Hospitals run on teamwork, and nurses rely on each other for safety. A humiliating label can make every shift feel hostile.

And that rolls straight into the bigger question, what counts as harassment when everyone plays it off as “just a joke.”

This story looks simple on the surface. A nickname spread at work, someone said it out loud, now the nurse feels humiliated.

In a hospital setting, though, “simple” rarely exists.

Nursing culture depends on trust, fast communication, and mutual respect. People share high-stress moments, long nights, and emotionally heavy patient care. When coworkers turn someone’s body into a label, they chip away at that trust. The target starts wondering who laughs, who repeats it, who introduced the new nurse to it in the first place.

Then you get the classic workplace poison, group discomfort.

The moment the nurse realized the nickname pointed at her, the floor got weird. People avoided her. The charge nurse tried to smooth it over with humor. That pattern shows up in workplaces all the time. The group feels guilty, so they act awkward. The target absorbs the awkwardness as shame.

The real issue isn’t “nipples showing.” Bodies do what bodies do, especially in cold hospitals with harsh lighting and thin scrubs.

The issue is that coworkers chose a sexualized identifier.

In US guidance, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission describes harassment based on sex as including conduct “of a sexualized nature” and sexual remarks, along with other verbal conduct that can create a hostile work environment. That’s a big deal in this story, because the nickname reduces a nurse to a sexual body detail, then spreads it as common shorthand.

OP also didn’t imagine the nickname in a vacuum. A brand-new nurse already knew it. That detail strongly suggests someone introduced the term to her, possibly as casual “workplace language.” When a nickname becomes common vocabulary, it stops being a one-off comment. It becomes repeated conduct, and repetition changes how HR departments evaluate harm.

Healthcare workers already face high rates of workplace mistreatment, and nurses often take the worst of it. A meta-analysis on workplace violence against healthcare professionals reported an overall prevalence of workplace violence around 62.4%, and it also reported sexual harassment prevalence in the data it reviewed.

Even when the source of harm varies, patient behavior, visitor behavior, staff behavior, the takeaway stays the same. Healthcare settings run hot, and leaders have to actively manage culture.

So what should someone do in OP’s position, in a way that stays realistic?

First, name the behavior clearly for yourself. “My coworkers use a sexualized nickname about my body” lands differently than “People have a little joke about me.” Precise language helps you decide your next step.

Second, document. Dates, who said what, where, and who witnessed it. Documentation gives you options later, including options that do not involve a dramatic showdown.

Third, pick the smallest effective intervention.

If OP trusted her manager, a private conversation could set a boundary without turning into a department-wide scandal. A manager can say, “Use first name plus last initial. Stop using body-based identifiers.” That approach solves the operational problem, too, since float pool staff move around and need clear identification anyway.

If OP didn’t trust local leadership, HR becomes a more appropriate route. HR can still respond without firing people. HR can issue a reminder about professional conduct, require training, and document the issue in case retaliation happens later.

That last piece matters, because retaliation risks often keep people silent. The nurse in the post chose silence, bought new bras, and applied elsewhere. That response makes emotional sense. It also shows the cost of “harmless” nicknames, they can push good staff out.

The core message here feels blunt.

A workplace that labels someone by a sexual body detail doesn’t have a harmless culture. It has a disrespect problem that will eventually land on someone else.

Check out how the community responded:

Most commenters treated the nickname as workplace harassment, not a cute “identifier,” and they wanted a formal report on record.

snarfblattinconcert - NTA. The nickname is unprofessional and sets a bad precedent. They could use first name plus last initial.

DeathGP - NTA. Harmless my [butt]. That’s s__ual harassment.

[Reddit User] - NTA. Talk to your boss and to HR. They chose a secret s__ual identifier for a reason.

little_maggots - NTA. Inappropriate and unprofessional. Have it on record with HR.

A big group focused on the “you were never supposed to find out” logic, and they basically said, “If it was fine, nobody would hide it.”

Icy_Pumpkin_7142 - NTA. If it’s no harm no foul, why hide it from you? They kept it secret because they know it’s wrong.

matchy_blacks - If you were never supposed to find out, it isn’t harmless. Report it to HR and let them decide.

PennyyPickle - NTA. A new nurse using it means someone introduced you as that. That’s out of order. Go to HR.

CaitieLou_52 - NTA. That kind of stuff belongs in grade school. Adults should not act like this at work.

One commenter warned that HR could backfire socially, and they pushed OP to change the “identifier” first.

Blacbamboo - NTA, but don’t do it. Complaining about teasing rarely goes well. Cover up, laugh it off, then go to HR if it continues.

vandajoy - Info. What do you want HR to do?

This nurse didn’t overreact, she reacted like a normal person who got blindsided at work.

Nobody signs up to become a secret nickname, especially not a nickname about their body. Hospitals already demand so much emotional control. Nurses absorb grief, stress, and pressure all day. Then they’re supposed to shrug off a sexualized label like it’s a harmless quirk.

OP’s update made me a little sad, because it shows how these things usually end. The target changes bras, changes shifts, changes jobs, and the workplace keeps its “joke” culture intact.

That outcome doesn’t mean OP made a bad choice. It means she prioritized peace over confrontation, and plenty of people do that.

Still, the bigger lesson sits there.

A respectful workplace doesn’t need secret nicknames about body parts to tell coworkers apart.

What do you think, would you go to HR and force the issue into the open? Or would you do what OP did, quietly fix what you can and plan your exit?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 votes | 0%

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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