It’s mid-afternoon on a busy unit, and several staff members are taking their break at the same time. The room is small, the kettle is boiling, and people are chatting casually while grabbing snacks from their bags.
As Jordan walks in, they notice two coworkers — Mira and Asha — whispering at the corner table. The volume rises just enough for Jordan to catch snippets:
“Honestly, she’s so slow… I don’t know how nights put up with her.”
“I heard the manager is already fed up.”
Jordan freezes for a second when they realize the comments are about Leila, a newer care aide who has been trying hard to learn the routines. Moments later, Leila herself steps into the room with her lunch in hand. The whispering stops instantly.
Leila looks around, senses the tension, and quietly sits alone by the window.
Jordan feels uncomfortable. They know gossip can damage trust, create cliques, and make new staff feel unsafe — but they’re unsure how to step in without igniting conflict.
This moment becomes a choice: say nothing and let the gossip keep circulating… or find a way to shift the tone toward respect and support.