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.
He was basically stealing hundreds of hours of vacation time and hiding the trail by pinning it on us.
My simple request for a Friday off was the one “glitch” that didn’t match his forged records, and it triggered a full-scale audit. HR actually thanked me for being the one person who followed the rules so strictly that his scheme finally fell apart. By Friday afternoon, he was the one being escorted out with a cardboard box.
So, Bright Side, did I just stumble into the luckiest break of my career, or was this bound to happen? I feel like I survived a total nightmare. Please, help!
Jenny
Dear DeepUsa readers, we want to hear from you: did Jenny handle this with the right amount of professional grit and compassion for herself, or was skipping the outing too big of a risk? Do you think it’s ever okay for a manager to use HR as a “boogeyman” to control their team?
Let us know in the comments if you’ve ever accidentally uncovered a secret just by following the rules! Next article: 15 Workplace Stories Where Kindness and Compassion Lit Up the Entire Room
