Daily
Feb 09, 2026

One day an old lady went to the doctor

One day an old lady went to the doctor

The nurse heard her scream through the door.

Not the kind of scream that demands attention in a busy clinic—no collapse, no sirens—but the sharp, wounded sound of someone realizing she is being mocked instead of helped. Inside the examination room sat an elderly woman clutching her handbag to her chest, shoulders stiff, jaw set, already preparing herself for the familiar dismissal.

It had happened twice before.

 

Two doctors had barely concealed their amusement. Before a full exam, before careful questions, they arrived at the same crude conclusion. They laughed. They made jokes. They prescribed ointments meant for something she insisted could not be the cause. Each time she told them the same thing—that she was eighty years old, that she had never been sexually active, that she knew her own body well enough to say something was wrong—they waved her off.

 

“Crabs,” they said, with smirks that made her feel small.

She left those appointments burning with more than irritation. The itch remained, but so did the humiliation. It settled somewhere deeper, alongside a lifetime of silence about her body, her loneliness, her belief that at her age, she no longer had the right to be taken seriously.

 

By the time she arrived at the third clinic, she was ready for another dismissal. She sat upright, handbag tight in her grip like armor, prepared to endure the same ritual again. But this time, something changed.

The doctor did not rush.

He did not joke. He did not assume. He listened.

Other posts