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Nobody likes a micromanager! Rules, standards, and discipline are definitely crucial in a working environment, that’s true. However, what’s equally essential is the trust that managers place in their employees. If you have little of that, you’ll only breed resentment in the workplace and have to deal with huge turnover rates.

Some of the employees of Reddit shared their most bizarre work stories on r/meirl. They spilled the tea about the most ridiculous reasons that they ever got in trouble for at work. We’ve collected the most interesting and frustrating posts for you to enjoy on your coffee break. But God forbid anyone’s 12 seconds late to get back to their desk!

#1

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work Got in trouble for eating in my car during my break because I might be needed to come back early. I explained that's why I eat in my car.

RightWingWorstWing , RDNE Stock project Report

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Brenda
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6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

They can't require you to remain on the premises during your break.

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#2

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I was reprimanded for working too much, and for not working enough, within an hour of each other. I was the only person remaining in a team of four people, so I was sneaking into the office early to get some extra stuff done off the clock. I was caught and written up for that. About an hour after I had walked out of my boss's office she asked me to come back again to threaten to put me on my "final warning" for failing to deal with the backlog that was accumulating while we were understaffed.

Twuntz , Yan Krukau Report

#3

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I was 12 seconds late coming back from break once

Was talked to about time management

Airspirit26 , Ono Kosuki Report

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Meowzers!
Community Member
6 months ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I had this happen at one job. We had to log off our phones with a break code if we were on lunch or needed the toilet. The ladies' toilets were 5 mins away from my desk, and usually there was a queue as there were only 6 cubicles for an office of over 100 (there were multiple men's toilet facilities but only one for ladies). We were allowed exactly 10 mins as toilet breaks for the whole day. Apparently, I was 3 mins late getting back from said toilet after having a p1ss and so got written up for it. It didn't help when I brought up the double standards of my supervisor who seemingly took cigarette breaks whenever they fancied it even though they were meant to be managing the paperwork for our calls and we needed them to sign off our work after each call. I didn't stay in the job too long after that, I quit after getting written up again after I was crippled with pain and needed an ambulance to take me to hospital for emergency surgery after I had an ovarian cyst rupture.

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Employees value managers who value them and find ways to encourage them. On the flip side, micromanagers are a living, breathing, typing nightmare to be around. You know that you’re working with the latter if they never delegate their work, constantly pester you for updates, and don’t want you making any decisions without their knowledge.

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Micromanagers can’t see the forest for the trees: they focus so much on itty-bitty details that they ignore the bigger perspective. They’re hardly ever satisfied, have a massive employee turnover rate, and get irritated if you don’t loop them in on everything that you do. Micromanagers are also very big on monitoring their employees’ performance to a bizarre extent. And they also tend to ignore others’ work-life boundaries, insisting that their jobs are more important than anything else. 

#4

I got told I'm too sensitive and need to accept people have their own personalities or leave... After reporting a guy for repeatedly calling team members racial slurs and then assaulting me and threatening to kill me multiple times when I called out his bad behavior. All of which was in front of our supervisor...
F**k Home Depot.

TheImp4411 Report

#5

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I got written up for taking 4.5 sick days in a calendar year when we had 12 allotted. The company average was 4, so they wrote up everyone who had more.

j03yw00t , Andrea Piacquadio Report

#6

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work Suspended from my waitressing job for a week for having overly bushy eyebrows. Not poorly groomed, just very full. Like Brooke Shield’s eyebrows. Manager said they were “distracting” to the customers. He wanted me to pluck them into the thin style that was more popular in the 90’s. I enjoyed my week off and, when I came back he asked me if I’d thought about what I was going to do about my eyebrows. Told him I was going to keep their natural shape and, if he didn’t like it I’d be happy to talk to a lawyer about racial discrimination at work. He dropped the issue and I quit soon after.

LastDitchTryForAName , Morteza Khobzi Report

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Any traditional working environment needs all of its employees to be on the same page on the stuff that truly matters. That means having a clear understanding of your responsibilities, knowing what kinds of deadlines you have to meet, how you’re supposed to treat your clients, and what your working day and potential overtime look like. 

Rules are there for clarity. They also ensure that the projects that matter are completed on time and that your customers end up getting exactly what they wanted. However, no set of workplace regulations is ever going to be ‘perfect’: there’s always going to be some nuances, misinterpretations, and rules that simply do not work in real life. So it helps to see the rules as general guidelines that are meant to be followed, but not something to be worshipped ‘as written.’ 

#7

Leaving town and going to the lake because I wasn't scheduled for four days straight. My manager told me that just because I'm not on the schedule doesn't mean I'm guaranteed a day off. I needed to put in for vacation if I'm actually leaving town. Otherwise, I need to stay at home in case I'm called in. I lasted two months there.

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Luke Branwen
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6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

In that case, the OP should've been paid for the entire time since he's considered on-call.

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#8

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I politely told multiple C level executives to put steel toe shoes on while on my production floor because it set a bad example that all the production workers had to wear them per the rules but the suits were in dress shoes and heels. So basically I was in trouble for following and enforcing the company safety policy.

Baldersmash , Los Muertos Crew Report

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#9

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I was told I was insubordinate because when my boss asked me a question, I said "Let me dig a little deeper before making a decision."

wryno14 , Amy Hirschi Report

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Papa
Community Member
6 months ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The proper reply to an accusation of insubordination is "I didn't know I was in the Army"

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Some managers (and even regular employees) take the rules far too seriously for everyone’s good. They’re overly zealous. They might berate you for being a few seconds late coming into work. Or they lecture you about minute details while never praising you for your accomplishments. For them, nothing you do will ever be good enough because they have unrealistic standards for performance.

Someone shouldn't be lectured because they're a few seconds late (unless you want to start keeping track of all the times they've been early). However, if there's a genuine issue with chronic lateness, it's something that needs to be addressed in a friendly but firm one-on-one meeting.

Here’s the thing, though. Having standards and aiming for quality is essential if you want to do well in business, however, you get there by having a capable, highly motivated, and empowered team. If you’re constantly criticizing your employees, writing them up for nonsense, and failing to find ways to praise and support them, you might soon be putting out job ads—looking for new coworkers.

For some more ridiculous work stories and micromanagers ruining everyone’s day, check out Bored Panda’s previous article.

#10

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I got fired from McDonald's for looking at the prices when I had a customer ask how much a new menu item was. It was my second day on the job.

-enterfandomhere-fan , Visual Karsa Report

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#11

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I got a stern talking to because I took credit for my idea in my annual review. The head of the department had said it was her idea and been touting this as something great she did that year. Our reviews did pass over her boss’s desk, and he saw it. So I got in trouble for accidentally outing her lie and taking credit for my work.

RandomNameOfMine815 , Christina @ wocintechchat.com Report

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Jennik
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6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I've had multiple managers take credit for ideas/projects of mine. Some overtly, others sneakily in discussions with the CEO (not realising I could hear every word from my desk). Then there was the manager who insisted on a certain project direction despite a colleague and I (both experts in that particular field) strongly advising against it. When it failed she said (in a meeting, with lots of people around), "I cannot imagine why you thought it was a good idea to do that."

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#12

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work The lines of my excel charts were not thick enough, I was following the company design guide

CulturalAd2344 , kroshka__nastya Report

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DB
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6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

When I sent paperwork to the main office it was slightly out of alignment, and it triggered someone's OCD. A co-worker was reprimanded because he didn't put the paperwork package together properly. The next time he included the example of how to put it together which was a photocopy of how he had been doing it right down to his name and employee number.

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#13

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I was told I wasn't a team player because I didn't want to go to the waterslides on my day off.

Nillabeans , Edgar Rodrigo Edgar Rodrigo Report

#14

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work Not smiling enough. Written up and coached every morning on smiling, how to smile, when to smile, how long to hold a smile, etc.

Commercial_Place9807 , Moose Photos Report

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Cat Palmer
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6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'm going to go out on a limb here and say OP is female (presenting) and the subject was never raised with anyone who presents as male.

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Michael Largey
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

The most effective way to get an employee to smile is a raise.

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Captain Awesome
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

And now I can hold a radiant smile and tell you to fûck off with aplomb

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Jaya
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Completely reasonable, as long as your job is modeling for a tooth paste ad.

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Meowzers!
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I had this whilst working in a sh1tty pub that always had trouble and the police called out to daily. I got told I needed to smile more. There was nothing to smile about; all the staff were more interested in trying not to get threatened or stabbed, or hit by bullets from the multiple drive by shootings that happened there. I lasted 3 weeks and quit. At 18 I hadn't quite reached the despair of adulthood and certainly didn't want to die in a stupid bar fight.

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Annie Persson
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I would do my very best to follow the instructions to the very letter, I would practice at home in front of the mirror until I had perfected the Uncanny Valley grin. You know, the one that looks like an (almost) perfect imitation of a human expression. Where they can't put the finger on what is wrong, they just sense vaguely that something is off

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Ralph Watkins
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I knew a girl who the human version of Grumpy Cat. She worked at Disney Store. She got written up for this too.

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Khavrinen
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I'd be smiling all the way to my next place of employment.

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#15

I once got a written warning for my attendance record. Their policy was to take the number of days of work you missed divided by the number of work days in the fiscal year so far. If it was below a certain percentage, they would write you up. Mine dipped below the "acceptable" percentage because I took two weeks off at the beginning of the fiscal year for the birth of my son.

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#16

I was a top producer at this company and went “out of policy” to correct a mistake someone else made on one of our largest accounts. A new director wrote me up, and I refused to sign the corrective action arguing I did what was necessary to retain their business. I was placed on a PIP until I would sign the write up. I was number one in sales and was on a PIP. I received another job offer and left a couple weeks later.

That account dropped that company when they learned I was leaving.

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#17

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work Not me, but my student (a woman) who was on a year in industry and I was helping supervise got yelled at by my boss (also a woman) for wearing a pink dress to the office once

A pink dress wasn't appropriate for a woman in engineering, apparently

Deviator_Stress , Tamara Bellis Report

#18

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I once got in trouble for making too much money. I worked a straight commission job.

Overdrv76 , Karolina Grabowska Report

#19

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I once got fired because when we came back from our mandatory Christmas break they asked if I was glad to be back at work and I said no, said I had a bad attitude.

Joe_Linton_125 , Anna Shvets Report

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Cat Palmer
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Yeah, that's just one of the polite little lies you have to tell, like answering "fine, thanks" when asked how you are. No-one on a work context wants to know your inner trauma.

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#20

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work Drinking free water at our beverage station, that’s free to everyone… even us..

Electric_Whip , Lisa Fotios Report

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Captain McSmoot
Community Member
6 months ago

This comment is hidden. Click here to view.

If you are one of those who abuse this or one of those loud slurpers, I hope this happened to you more than once.

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#21

Was told not to copy the VP. Should go through the "chain of command."

My boss didn't know the VP had asked me to find that info and send it to him. I was copying my boss so she wasn't out of the loop.

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#22

Got in trouble because the finance director bought on of those fake titles from online, the ones where you buy a tiny bit of land in Scotland, and get to call yourself a ‘Lord’ (even though it’s b******t). The finance director sent out an email to all the staff stating that we had to address him as ‘Lord….name) and all emails had to have the honorific. It thought he was being funny, that it was a joke, and that he was being ironic, I replied ‘ this is funny, made me laugh’. He wasn’t joking.

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Poison Ivy/Boo
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6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Ha! Those titles are a joke! The land you're buying is usually a small plot of landfill 🤣

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#23

I worked as part of an account management team for a "corporate, inner city" type company.
I was raised to be polite to everyone I guess, so when I'd find myself at a door at the same time as someone else, I'd hold the door open for them and allow them to pass through first. No need to converse further, it's just what you do, right?
I did this for everyone.

I got called into a full investigative committee of owners and management when one of the women I worked with reported me for sexual harassment. Apparently, holding a door open whilst indicating they should go through first a handful of times over the course of months constitutes sexual predation to this person.

Thank the gods my immediate supervisor ( also a woman) was a very down to earth person. After the "charges" had been laid out to me, she spent about 5 minutes explaining that I did this as a general rule and all was quickly forgotten.

That lady rocked! I left soon after that incident but I have fond memories of her, I hope she's well.

I'm glad I live in the hinterlands now and don't have to worry about things like this.

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Honcho Chorcoran
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Good on your boss. What a ridiculous chip on the shoulder of that person - they no doubt live in perpetual persecution and victimhood in their mind. So toxic.

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#24

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work Invited a new co worker to have lunch with us.

Proceeds to be called into a meeting by one of the directors and was lectured about peer pressure and how its the “first cousin” of bullying.

bensanna19 , fauxels Report

#25

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work Got written up for insubordination because of the expressions I had during a Zoom interview. I didn't say one word, all I did was nod or shake my head at the wrong times apparently.

the_real_maddison , Anna Shvets Report

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#26

Written up for falling below the calculated percentage of available time off. I had 24 hours of PTO available and took 8 hours off, still had 16 hours available but got in trouble. Why even say I have time available if you aren’t going to let me use it?

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#27

Two senior leaders at a previous company didn't like that I answered all of their questions with "no ma'am" or "yes ma'am".

I was raised in the south. *Everyone* is ma'am or sir, and it's not even an age related thing!

It's not my fault that both of them were successful, recently divorced single mothers in their mid 40's with tons of recent plastic surgery. They said me calling them "ma'am" hurt their feelings, and made them feel old. I thought they had accomplished a lot that they should feel great about, and it's a little weird that one lowly employee saying "ma'am" bothers them so much. I'm also not their damn therapist, and won't tap dance around their insecurities. I told that to HR when they called me in to give me an actual talking-to about it.

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#28

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work Not "managing" my chair. Aka not tucking it in far enough when I walked away from my desk. This guy just lost it on me.

Glennmorangie , Lisa Fotios Report

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JL
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

If you're blocking foot traffic because of it I could see them saying something, otherwise, who cares?

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#29

Working as a cook in a restaurant, I got yelled at by the owner for telling him one of the waitresses was throwing away the (metal) silverware instead of washing it.

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lily jones
Community Member
6 months ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Not surprised, working in a restaurant, everyone yells at you, and you're always in someone's way. Still this instance seems unreasonable

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#30

30 People Share The Most Ridiculous Reasons They Got In Trouble At Work I got a stern talking to in my first office job for starting an email saying "Hey ____" instead of "Hi ____". I was told it was unprofessional for using "hey"...

TheHighCountry , Taryn Elliott Report

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BlindAres
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6 months ago (edited) DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Depending on who the email was going to, "hey" could most definitely be unprofessional. There was exactly a zero percent chance I'd address an email with "hey (insert any Officer rank here with last name) while in the military.

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#31

My first job out of college, I told someone I would “shoot them an email.” One of the managers got angry at me because I allegedly didn’t know how to speak professionally in a business setting. She told my boss and all.

Fast forward 11 years and I’ve heard others say “shoot an email” too many times to count.

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#32

being right and in his words "I was too smug about it".

I worked at a laboratory and I told my supervisor what the fix was for one of our pipetting robots and he told me it was impossible that that was the fix as it was "too straightforward for a complex robot" and I was completely right about how it needed to be fixed.

and then I said "well we could have saved a lot of time if you did what I told you" (which was pretty smug)

also I studied for lab technician and he studied chemistry so there's that.

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Michael Largey
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

"Tell me, boss, what is the exactly right amount of smugness?"

#33

I was a new hire at a software company and part of the new employee training included having a senior member review your work after you finished a task. The senior members were all volunteers and you got randomly assigned one.

This review and approval was required for the task to be considered complete and failing to complete things on time would get you penalized (stuck in training an additional 2 weeks, forced to bring in donuts for the team, etc.). The training program management told us that we should email our mentors when our tasks were done so they would know to review our work and get things done by the end of the week.

So I finished my work one week on like Wednesday, and sent an email to my assigned mentor saying "Hey got my tasks done, when you get the chance can you give it a review and I can close it out before the end of the week".

Next morning I got the nastiest email ever about how I was rushing her and pressuring her. That it was totally unprofessional and rude for me to make such demands and that shes been dealing with issues so she might not have the time this week. She then reported me to the training program and they marked it in my training record and kept me in training for an additional 2 weeks.

I did however forward the email chain back to the training program and explained that this person was not able or willing to mentor me and she was removed from the program. I got a new mentor that was super chill and helpful and breezed through the last 2 weeks.

Th entire program was shut down like 6 months later, apparently I was not the first to have issues and it was deemed ineffective.

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René Sauer
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Uhm, excuse me? Forced to bring in donuts for everyone? F*ck that! Why should I spend more money then neccesary on that job?

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#34

I got yelled at . I mean red-face-spit-flying-everywhere kind of yelling. The reason? I cc someone who felt that it wasn't his business to know about the stuff. It was. Also, it was his first week.

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Michael Largey
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I've worked with people whose specialty was not knowing stuff. Sadly, they were often in charge.

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#35

I got a talking to from the boss because I finished my work in 40 hours instead of needing approved overtime to work Fridays to finish.

F**k contract firms that just want your a*s in a chair to make them $.

Also in that job they made me jump through hoops if I finished something in 40 hours they thought would take 80. According to the schedule, it was only half done if I only used 40 hours!

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Philler Space
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Those jobs are just saying they will pay you to write your novel.

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#36

My boss called me a thief and called the police on me.

All I did was replace a shared computer's monitor that I thought I had approval for. Approval was the following week and he "caught me" stealing.

I didn't take the monitor home and I could have just walked to the station and replace it with the old one but he didn't want to hear it. Police never talked to me but they talked to my boss and told him to f**k off.

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#37

my wife got disciplined at work for not saying thank you for receiving a 3$ lunch coupon due to being required to stay after work another hour. her charge nurse knew she wanted to leave on time but told her to stay anyways (cardiac sonography in a hospital)

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#38

I had a meeting with HR because my co worker who was my mothers age decided that I wasn’t speaking to her enough and therefore I made it a hostile work environment, even though she hated me from the very beginning so why would she want to speak to me?

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Papa
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

I don't think I could work in HR. I'd probably get fired the first time someone came to me to report some nonsense like that.

#39

I was told I was 'hassling senior managers' by emailing the finance director as soon as he got off a flight.

Reality: Sent an email requesting his approval for thing requiring his level of approval while (unknown to me) he was on a 12 hour flight to the far east. He turns on his blackberry as soon as he leaves the airplane, and my request comes up in his unread list. Apparently I should have waited a while.

And yes, he was the finance director of the tech. division.

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#40

We got fruit baskets to eat over the week. Free of charge, you can just pick something up.

A few months ago we also occasionaly had mangoes.

I had such a busy day I hadn't eaten anything yet. So when I went home, I took a mango with me.

Didn't eat it though. First had to walk my dog.

And I s**t you not, while I was walking; my boss asked me if I took the mango. When I confirmed it, he said "This isn't the intention of those. Can you take it with you again tomorrow?"

I found it super f*****g weird but okay fine.

Took it with me again the next day and ate it at work and no one batted an eye.

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#41

Clocked in 1 minute late a couple of times a week and regularly worked avg 7 minutes after shift-end. Guess what the problem was.

Of course I should have known that working extra time to get the job done wasn't appreciated. Quickly learned to wait 15 mins to get the OT.

Hey boss, if you don't give a little, I'll make you give more.

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#42

I was called in to my supervisor's office to discuss my "unprofessional conduct". The unorofessional conduct: adding a smiley face to an internal email when a colleague did me a huge favor.
That supervisor was the worst person I have ever worked for.

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#43

A co-worker and I were reprimanded for leaving at the end of our shift while the toilet flooded in a different department.

* We asked the manager of the department if they needed us to stay, and they said no.
* We were told our manager was on the way to help fix it.

Our department manager sat us down the next morning and said we should have waited for her to arrive for her to dismiss us. Previously she told us we should not stay past working hours.

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#44

Coming in early and leaving the front door unlocked, when it was a member of the cleaning crew that left it unlocked after coming in after me. The boss only saw me and assumed it was me that did it.

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#45

At a work party, I had grabbed a small plate for food but I didn't grab much (I figured if I wanted more I could go back). I went back for more CHIPS and my boss told me that I couldn't have seconds because others hadn't gotten their food. I just wanted chips.

So I looked her in the eye and grabbed more chips and left.

They pulled me aside to scold me after lunch.

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The Starsong Princess
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

So you butted in at a work party for seconds before everyone was served? But you think it doesn’t count because you only took a little? Yeah, I’m not surprised you heard about it. You need to work on your manners.

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#46

Ran a small crew cleaning 3 car dealerships at one 4 way intersection. Boss got mad at me for not cleaning out the insides of the trash cans, like spraying the empty trash cans out after we'd taken the trash bag out. I bout got fired for saying that's probably something we needed to be told to do

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#47

I got a letter from child support that told me I owe them 10k for the workers comp I took, but I didn't have workers comp, so I went to HR, the name on the sheet that signed off on the workers Comp, asked why she reported that I had workers comp when u didn't, and they she need to call child support to tell them it was a mistake. She fired me cause, "you can't just accuse people of stuff like that"

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#48

I got in trouble for "wasting everyone's time" by being critical of a new HR policy in a team-wide chat group, which apparently was not the correct forum.

Nevermind that people share stupid stuff in the chat groups all the time, *I* was the one wasting people's time.

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paulneff_1 avatar
Lexekon
Community Member
6 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

Depends on details, did your input result in others needing to follow up and check things?