In the relentless grind of working 10 to 16 hours a day, seven days a week, the promise of a long-awaited holiday becomes a beacon of hope and relief. Yet, just as the protagonist secures approval for their much-needed break, the crushing weight of their reality hits: their holiday is abruptly cancelled due to a staffing crisis during Eid, stripping away the rare chance for rest and replenishment.
Caught in the heart-wrenching tug-of-war between duty and personal well-being, they face the unfairness of being blamed for circumstances beyond their control. Despite their willingness to compromise, silence from management only deepens the sense of exhaustion and injustice, pushing them toward a confrontation with higher powers just to reclaim a moment of peace they rightfully deserve.

WIBTA if I told my boss it’s not MY job to cover shifts for them?

















According to workplace psychology principles, particularly those related to job demands-resources (JD-R) theory, sustained high job demands (10-16 hours daily, 7 days a week) require corresponding high job resources (like autonomy and the ability to take restorative breaks) to prevent burnout. When management cancels approved leave, it removes a critical resource, directly leading to the severe fatigue and emotional distress (crying in the car) described by the employee. The initial guilt-tripping to stay after handing in notice further demonstrates an unhealthy power dynamic where emotional obligation overrides professional boundaries.
The manager’s reaction upon discovering the pre-approved 3-hour leave—yelling, accusing the employee of lying, and questioning their commitment—is a clear example of poor conflict management and potential workplace bullying. In the UK context, annual leave is a statutory right; once approved, management bears the full responsibility for ensuring adequate operational coverage. The employee’s primary motivation here is not malice but a desperate need for recovery, which management actively obstructed. The fact that the employee loves the job but struggles with this specific manager suggests a structural issue within the management layer.
The employee’s decision to escalate to HR/upper management on Monday is the appropriate professional step, as this issue involves documentation (proof of approval) and repeated managerial overreach, impacting their health. For future situations, the constructive recommendation is to establish firmer boundaries regarding leave approval: treat approved leave as non-negotiable unless a true emergency arises, document all requests and approvals in writing (beyond text message if possible), and utilize HR sooner when management violates established scheduling policies, rather than absorbing the emotional labor.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.


Chances are – they wouldn’t reimburse so they’d just let you have it.


![[deleted] NTA. Your time is valuable. I don't know who...](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/3dadce3de0095c9489ea34b4b729c878.png)













Just quit. That is not a sustainable job. Find something that treats you like a human.

The individual in this situation is experiencing extreme exhaustion and burnout due to working excessive hours, leading to a critical need for approved time off that was subsequently revoked by management. The central conflict lies between the employee’s established right to earned leave and the employer’s failure in managerial duty to secure adequate staffing, which the employee feels pressured to solve due to guilt and the desire to maintain their valued role.
Given the management’s refusal to honor approved leave, the employee’s decision to escalate the matter to higher management or HR is understandable. The core question remains: Should the employee prioritize their documented right to rest and escalate the documented managerial failures, even if it causes immediate workplace conflict, or should they concede to avoid making their already stressful work environment more difficult in the short term?







