Workplace life is usually about getting through the day, but sometimes an office secret comes to light and changes everything. One small gesture of standing up for yourself can spark a massive shift in your career. Whether it’s a supportive glance from a peer or a few heartfelt words from HR, being honest with yourself is a true act of kindness.
Let’s find out Jenny’s story.
Here is everything Jenny told us.
Go get them, girl!! Hey <strong>Bright Side,
I’m still trying to process everything that happened this week.
Our company had one of those “mandatory” team-building outings scheduled for Friday, but honestly, I was just burnt out. I’m a high-performer, but I’m not a “forced fun” person. So, I decided to be proactive and filed for official leave on Thursday and Friday.
I just wanted a long weekend to recharge. My boss absolutely lost it. He cornered me in the break room and basically tried to scare me into submission.
He told me, “HR will destroy you for this! You’re not being a team player, and they’ve been looking for a reason to trim the fat.”
I was terrified, but I stood my ground because I knew I had the leave hours. I took my time off, but I spent the whole weekend with a pit in my stomach, waiting for the axe to fall.
Would workplaces be more successful if they focused on how well people worked instead of how long they stayed? When I walked back into the office on Monday, the summons to the HR director’s office was already sitting in my inbox. I was shaking, literally sweating through my shirt, thinking I was about to be fired for wanting a little work-life balance.
But when I sat down, the mood wasn’t hostile at all. The director looked at me and said, “We’ve been doing a deep dive into your department’s attendance logs because of your recent request.”
I started to apologize, but she held up a hand and showed me a stack of printed emails. “We found a series of leave approvals for you over the last two years that you never actually used.
But when we checked the metadata, we realized something: these aren’t your emails. They’re his.”
I love how obnoxious these bosses are, think they can intimidate the people below them but forget there are always people above them. It turns out my boss had been using my name (and the names of several other people on the team) to approve “ghost leave” for himself.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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