Imagine mopping up a “Mississippi River” of urine multiple times a day in a bodega bathroom, courtesy of an elderly man and his caretaker granddaughter who never buy a thing.
This 20-year-old university student, working part-time at a family friend’s bodega, faced just that. Frustrated by the daily mess and no support from his boss, he snapped, publicly calling out the middle-aged woman for her grandfather’s bathroom disasters.
Her tearful comeback about being his sole caretaker left him questioning his outburst. Is he a hero for standing up to the mess or a jerk for embarrassing her?
This Reddit AITA post is a gritty mix of workplace woes and caregiving chaos. Want the full scoop? Check out the original post below!
With a boss shrugging off the issue and a woman leaning on the bodega’s facilities, this bathroom saga has Reddit divided. Was the Redditor’s public shaming a bold move or a messy misstep?














Talk about a workplace mess that stinks worse than a neglected restroom! This Redditor’s clash with a repeat bathroom offender is a raw blend of frustration, hygiene woes, and caregiving complexities.
The Redditor’s job at the bodega is already demanding, but cleaning up rivers of urine left by an elderly man multiple times daily—without a single purchase from his caretaker, pushes the limits.
His boss’s claim that they can’t legally refuse bathroom access may hold water (no pun intended) in some U.S. jurisdictions, where public restrooms are often protected for accessibility.
But the woman’s reliance on the bodega as her grandfather’s personal pit stop, knowing he leaves a mess, feels like exploitation. His public outburst, while harsh, came from being stuck as an unpaid janitor for her family’s issue.
Her defense, she’s his only caretaker, jobless and overwhelmed, adds sympathy but doesn’t erase her responsibility to clean up or find alternatives. This situation mirrors a broader tension: businesses as de facto public facilities versus individual accountability.
A 2023 study from the Journal of Urban Health found 60% of urban small businesses face overuse of restrooms by non-customers, straining resources. The woman’s failure to address the mess, possibly assuming it’s the bodega’s problem, fueled the Redditor’s frustration.
His loud call-out in a busy store, though, risked humiliating an overwhelmed caregiver, especially if her grandfather’s condition (e.g., incontinence) is beyond her control.
Reddit’s suggestions, like a “customers only” sign or handing her a mop, are practical but tricky. The boss’s hands-off stance leaves the Redditor in a bind, but a private talk with the woman, offering solutions like adult diapers or a cleaning request, might’ve de-escalated things.
He’s not wrong to demand respect for his workplace, but softer delivery could’ve avoided the drama. A chat with the boss about enforcing purchase policies or sharing cleaning duties could help.
Readers, ever dealt with a public mess that wasn’t your job? Was his outburst a clean win or a dirty move? Share your take!
See what others had to share with OP:
Reddit comments predominantly label the poster as not the a**hole (NTA) for confronting a woman who repeatedly brings her elderly grandfather to the store’s bathroom, leaving significant urine messes for the poster to clean multiple times daily.









They criticize her for knowingly exploiting the public restroom to avoid cleaning at home, calling her actions inconsiderate and neglectful, especially given the grandfather’s mobility issues.













Suggestions include enforcing a “customers only” bathroom policy, requiring her to make purchases, or handing her a mop to clean up herself.
Some recommend documenting the issue for legal protection or reporting potential neglect to adult protective services.









While a few acknowledge the confrontation could have been handled more tactfully, such as privately discussing the issue first, most support the poster’s frustration, arguing that the woman’s entitlement and the boss’s inaction justify the response.







This bodega bathroom brawl shows how fast frustration can overflow when boundaries are ignored. The Redditor’s public shaming was a cry against being stuck with someone else’s mess, but a private talk might’ve cleaned things up without the drama.
The woman’s caregiving burden doesn’t excuse exploiting a business, and the boss needs to step up. Can they find a solution that respects both the store and her grandfather’s needs? How would you handle a daily cleanup that’s not your job? Drop your thoughts below!









