Trapped under the relentless weight of a cruel boss, she endured endless 13-hour shifts without pay, her hard-earned Master’s degree lost in a sea of abuse. Screamed at, pelted with objects, and dismissed by upper management as needing “thick skin,” she fought back silent tears in the unbearable solitude of a toxic workplace.
Yet amidst the torment, her spirit never broke. Even when forced to arrange stolen joy—tickets her partner rightfully earned—she held onto the hope of freedom, a future beyond the cruelty, where dignity and respect would finally replace fear and pain.

Boss overworked me and I got my revenge 🥹🤍












Dr. Christine Maslach, a leading researcher on burnout, discusses how chronic exposure to high-demand, low-control work environments—like the one described—inevitably leads to emotional exhaustion and cynicism. The OP’s experience of being forced to work 13-hour shifts without overtime, coupled with physical intimidation (objects being thrown), represents a severe breach of workplace safety and basic human dignity, moving beyond standard workplace stress into clear psychological abuse.
The actions of upper management, dismissing the abuse by advising the employee to ‘have thick skin,’ indicate a dysfunctional organizational culture where abusive leadership is implicitly condoned. This invalidation escalates the employee’s sense of isolation, making retaliation feel like the only available recourse when established power structures offer no protection. The act of providing invalid tickets can be understood through the lens of regaining agency; it was a carefully planned act of symbolic payback aimed at causing inconvenience and mirroring the disruption the boss caused in the employee’s life.
From a professional standpoint, while the emotional motivation is entirely understandable given the toxic environment, intentional sabotage (even minor) is inappropriate and carries legal risk, which the OP wisely avoided by leaving first. A more constructive future approach when facing such high levels of abuse involves detailed documentation, seeking counsel from HR (if functional), or pursuing alternative employment immediately, rather than waiting for a final confrontation. However, in this extreme case where all other avenues failed, the employee successfully executed a non-violent, if petty, act of closure.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.





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Edit: I don’t know how to explain this exactly… but this person is leveraging your employment to gain benefits that belong to you. And still doesn’t want to pay you for your time. Take this dick to court immediately!


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The former employee experienced severe mistreatment, including excessive hours and verbal/physical aggression from their boss, feeling unsupported by upper management. The core conflict lay between the employee’s need for professional respect and the abusive reality enforced by workplace culture and a direct superior.
Given the sustained abuse and feeling of powerlessness, was the final act of retaliation a justifiable expression of self-preservation, or did it cross an ethical boundary, regardless of the provocation? How should employees navigate intolerable workplace abuse when formal channels fail?







