Try GOLD - Free
#MeToo
Guideposts
|June 2018
Years ago, it had happened to me. I couldn’t let it happen to another young woman

LET ME CALL HER SANDY. SHE WAS a new sales rep for the food service company I worked for— fresh out of college, smart and ambitious. I was glad to have her on the team I managed. That day I was accompanying her on a sales call as part of her training. “Where are we going?” I asked as I got in her car.
“The country club,” she said. “I’m hoping we can get some business from the new chef.”
“Sounds good.” I’d started out as a sales rep. Several years earlier, I’d been a lot like Sandy—young and eager to make my name in sales. There weren’t many women in the field then. I felt I had to work extra hard to prove myself.
We parked in the back, near the employees’ entrance, and let ourselves into the kitchen. The chef greeted us and took us into his office. He was friendly enough. Sandy launched into her sales pitch. I watched our potential customer, gauging his reaction. He made a joke, and something in his tone set off warning bells in my head.
I watched him more closely. When Sandy took out a catalog of our products, he wasn’t looking at the glossy pages. He was checking her out, his eyes raking her body. I suspected Sandy was rattled but she didn’t let on. I knew exactly what was going through her head: I don’t want to lose this sale.
Thank God I was with her. There was a lot Sandy needed to learn. And it wasn’t just about sales. If only someone had told me, if only someone had stood up for me when I’d been in that same position.
“I think you should come back by yourself next time,” the chef said to her. With that, the sales call came to an abrupt end. I suspect the chef would have tried to take things further if I hadn’t been there.
Sandy and I went back to the car. “That guy was a little creepy,” she said.
This story is from the June 2018 edition of Guideposts.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,500+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Guideposts

Guideposts
The Weight
Food was my first love, but it was a relationship that had to change
6 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
Maternal Instincts?
Deep inside, I yearned to have another baby. But maybe God's answer was no
5 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
One Small Way, Lord
A day in the life of a VA hospital chaplain
4 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
Larry and His Beautiful Bark
Thank God I couldn't train him not to do it
6 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
Experience, Look
The listing for our Cape Cod rental warned, “four-wheel-drive recommended,” but nothing could have prepared us for the five-mile, one-lane rutted dirt road that twisted through the woods. Twice, we had to reverse into a sandy stretch to let an oncoming car pass.
1 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
The Great Hearing Aids War
My husband and I love each other, but even after 43 happy years, we can also drive each other absolutely crazy
4 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
Doing It Scared
I thought our weekend at the Iowa State Fair was supposed to be all about fun. Then my son bought us tickets to something I swore I’d never do
5 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
What Friends Are For
I thought my health woes were going to ruin our long-awaited reunion
7 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
what prayer can do
POWER IN OUR DAY-TO-DAY LIVES
1 mins
Aug/Sept 2025

Guideposts
Pulled Under
You probably know Jesse Hutch from his Hallmark and Great American Family movies. What you probably don't know is the near-death experience that changed his life long before he became an actor
8 mins
Aug/Sept 2025
Translate
Change font size