The user, a 27-year-old woman working in marketing at a mid-sized tech company, began experiencing discomfort due to actions from her manager, Dan (40sM), a few months into the situation. The issue started with Dan making compliments that felt overly personal, such as calling her magnetic or “the total package.”
The behavior escalated to inappropriate jokes about her appearance during meetings, which she addressed privately, only for Dan to dismiss her concerns. The situation peaked at a work happy hour where Dan made highly inappropriate comments and physically touched her. After reporting the incidents to HR, Dan was fired following an investigation, leading the user to feel both relieved and guilty about the professional consequences for Dan and his family.

AITAH for reporting my manager and getting him fired after he repeatedly made sexual comments towards me?
















As organizational psychologist Dr. Gary Chapman, known for his work on relationship dynamics, might frame this situation: ‘Clear, respectful boundaries are the foundation of any professional relationship; when one party consistently violates those boundaries, they assume the risk of consequences.’
The user’s initial actions—brushing off minor comments—are a common, albeit understandable, response to unwanted attention in the workplace, often stemming from a desire to maintain harmony or fear of retaliation. However, once the manager escalated to sexualized comments and physical contact (the touch on the posterior), the situation moved clearly into the realm of sexual harassment. The user’s decision to report the behavior to HR, after an initial attempt at informal resolution failed, aligns with standard professional protocols for addressing such misconduct. The reaction from some coworkers suggests a common phenomenon where the focus shifts to the accuser’s ‘overreaction’ rather than the perpetrator’s clear violation of conduct codes and the law.
The user’s feelings of guilt are a normal emotional response when severe corrective action results in significant negative outcomes for another individual, particularly when children are involved. However, accountability for Dan’s termination rests entirely on his pattern of inappropriate behavior and physical assault, not on the user’s decision to report it. To handle similar situations better, the user could document all incidents immediately, including witnesses, and escalate to HR sooner when informal requests to stop are ignored, prioritizing personal safety and professional integrity above avoiding temporary workplace tension.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.













The user currently feels a mix of relief that the harassment has stopped and guilt regarding the severe professional consequences faced by her former manager, especially concerning his family and the upcoming holidays. Her core conflict lies between her justified action to protect herself from inappropriate conduct and the resulting negative impact on Dan’s life.
The central question for debate is whether the user was wrong (AITAH) for reporting the harassment, knowing it led to her manager’s termination, or if the severity of his actions justified the outcome regardless of the fallout? Should the responsibility for the career loss be solely placed on the manager’s behavior?







