In the quiet hum of a bustling tech startup, two coworkers shared a small cube, their lives intertwined by work and fragile trust. Among them was Mary, a soft-spoken woman whose gentle exterior masked a deep-seated insecurity and a relentless victim complex that turned everyday challenges into personal battles.
As tensions simmered beneath the surface, a harsh joke from the VP of Sales—meant for everyone but understood by Mary as targeted cruelty—became the spark for a dramatic upheaval. Her decision to escalate the issue to the CEO sent ripples through the team, revealing how fragile workplace dynamics can shatter even the most unassuming connections.

Co-worker tries to throw me under a bus. It didn’t work.






















According to Dr. Aaron Beck, the founder of Cognitive Therapy, the employee’s reactions suggest maladaptive cognitive patterns, specifically confirmation bias and personalization, where neutral or ambiguous events are interpreted as direct, negative personal attacks. This pattern, often associated with underlying insecurity or a victim mentality, leads individuals to engage in defensive and aggressive behaviors that isolate them from support systems.
The initial incident with the VP of Sales highlights a failure in emotional regulation and boundary setting. While the VP’s humor may have been inappropriate, the employee’s choice to escalate immediately to the CEO, bypassing standard reporting lines, set a precedent for extreme reactions. This pattern repeated when she verbally attacked the Director and management in an open office, demonstrating a significant lack of professional communication skills and an inability to manage workplace stress constructively. Her subsequent attempt to falsely implicate a long-term colleague shows a desperate, self-destructive effort to shift blame during her termination.
The employee’s behavior was fundamentally inappropriate for a professional setting because it prioritized immediate emotional reaction over strategic communication and relationship maintenance. A more effective approach would have involved seeking confidential mediation or clearly defining personal boundaries with supervisors, rather than resorting to public outbursts or unsubstantiated accusations against coworkers. Future management should focus on early intervention when such patterns of maladaptive attribution are observed, perhaps through mandatory communication training or employee assistance programs.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.



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The employee ultimately faced severe professional consequences due to her inability to manage perceived slights, leading to a rapid escalation of internal conflicts that damaged her reputation beyond repair. Her actions reflected a deep-seated belief that the workplace was hostile and conspiratorial against her, causing her to lash out at colleagues and management.
Given the pattern of escalating conflict rooted in perceived victimization, was the employee’s final attempt to manipulate her exit beneficial for her long-term professional standing, or did the quick resignation solidify the negative assessment made by leadership?







