Imagine walking out of your job for the last time, heart full, card in hand, and $1,000 tucked inside as a generous farewell gift. You assume it’s a lovely gesture to wish you well in the next chapter of life.
Now imagine finding out three years later… it wasn’t a goodbye gift at all. It was a “baby gift.”
A baby you never had. Because you were never pregnant.
That’s the uncomfortable reality one woman faced when a former coworker awkwardly patted her belly and asked how her “child” was doing, unleashing a spiral of confusion, mortification, and a furious HR call demanding the return of the money. Their reasoning? She “tricked” them… simply by looking pregnant.
The Redditor’s dilemma is stirring up a fiery debate – Here’s the original post:














An Assumption, a Gift, and a Very Bad Take
This story begins in 2020, when the Redditor (34F) left her job on good terms. On her last day, coworkers handed her a card filled with kind words and a generous cash gift totaling $1,000.
There was no mention of a baby, no reference to maternity, and certainly no confirmation from her end. She wasn’t pregnant, just someone living in a changing body, shaped in part by weight gain and a curved spine.
She never thought twice about the money. Until 2023.
That’s when she ran into an old coworker, who casually asked how her child was doing. Confused, she clarified: “What child?”
The coworker’s face turned pale. The awkwardness was instant. Turns out, a rumor had spread back then, some colleagues believed she was pregnant, based solely on how her body looked. Nobody ever asked. They just assumed.
And they gave her $1,000 based on that assumption.
Now, HR’s involved. Someone demanded the money back, claiming she misled them by wearing “pregnancy-shaped” clothes. The Redditor is stunned, humiliated, and wondering: Am I really the bad guy here?
When Gifts Are Based on Gossip, Not Facts
This situation is more than just a misunderstanding, it’s a reflection of how body assumptions in the workplace can cause lasting damage.
Etiquette expert Elaine Swann is blunt on the matter:
“Never assume someone is pregnant. Ever. It’s a private matter and incredibly invasive to speculate, especially in a professional environment.”
The idea that the Redditor “tricked” her coworkers by… existing in her body… is as offensive as it is absurd.
And legally? She’s not obligated to return a thing.
Workplace conflict studies, such as one published by the Journal of Social Psychology in 2023, show that 62% of misunderstandings in offices stem from unchecked assumptions or miscommunication.
The gift, given without confirmation, without conditions, and without clarification, is not her responsibility.
Even employment lawyer T. Simms confirms:
“Unless there’s documented intent for the money (e.g., a labeled fund or agreement), she owes nothing. Retrospective regret doesn’t equal entitlement.”
This wasn’t fraud, it was workplace gossip gone rogue. And now she’s dealing with the emotional fallout of body-shaming wrapped in false generosity.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
Commenters found the coworkers’ demand ridiculous, siding with the poster and calling the gift retraction petty, rude, and entirely unjustified.





Redditors quickly rallied behind the poster, calling the coworkers’ actions rude, harassing, and completely unreasonable.








Commenters didn’t hold back, slamming the coworkers for their assumptions and urging OP not to pay a cent back.





The Price of Assumption Is Not a Refund
This woman’s story isn’t really about a $1,000 misunderstanding, it’s about what happens when people make assumptions about our bodies, then blame us for not fitting the script they wrote in their heads.
She didn’t ask for the money.
She didn’t pretend to be pregnant.
She didn’t even know they thought she was.
So why should she be punished for their mistake?
Would you give the money back to avoid the drama or stand your ground against the body-shaming backlash?
Drop your thoughts in the comments because stories like this deserve to be talked about.









