There was a guy at work named Mark — quiet, polite, always on time. Every single day, he’d sit at the same table in the break room and eat the same lunch: two slices of plain bread with something inside, wrapped neatly in foil. No chips, no drink, no dessert.
We used to tease him about it. “Come on, Mark, ever heard of variety?” someone would joke. He’d just smile and shrug. “Simple’s good,” he’d say softly. That was it. He never got annoyed, never explained.
After a few years, Mark announced he was leaving the company. Said he needed to “focus on personal things.” On his last day, I offered to help him clear out his desk. We went through drawers, old folders, some pens, and sticky notes. Then I opened the bottom drawer — and froze.
Inside were dozens of brown paper bags. Each one was labeled with a date — every single day he’d worked there. Inside each bag was… another sandwich. Perfectly made, untouched, and wrapped.
My heart sank. “Mark… why didn’t you eat them?” I asked quietly.
He smiled faintly, his eyes distant. “They weren’t for me,” he said. “I make one for myself and one for my wife. It’s something we used to do every morning before she passed away. I couldn’t stop the routine. It’s the only thing that still feels normal.”
There was silence between us — the kind that fills a room when words just don’t fit.
Every day for years, we thought he was being odd or stingy. But in truth, he was just holding on to a piece of love he couldn’t let go of.
Sometimes the smallest, quietest habits hide the deepest pain — and the purest kind of love. 💔