In the high-stakes world of a bustling marketing agency, a young woman’s hard-earned promotion ignites a silent war. Her dedication and late nights earn her the leadership she deserves, but beneath the surface, envy and resentment fester in the heart of a once-friendly coworker whose bitterness turns toxic.
As trust crumbles and sabotage lurks in the shadows, she refuses to be a victim. With quiet determination, she fights back—not with confrontation, but with careful strategy and unyielding resolve, proving that strength often lies in vigilance and resilience.

Getting my coworker fired after she tried to sabotage me — even though she has three kids?














As renowned organizational psychologist Dr. David Clutterbuck explains, “Trust is the currency of collaboration, and when one party actively erodes that trust through sabotage, the foundation of the working relationship is irreparably broken.”
The situation described involves clear professional misconduct: active sabotage, documentation falsification (by deletion/reversion), and subsequent denial. The OP’s actions—implementing safeguards (backup, logging) and then presenting undeniable evidence to HR—were a textbook and necessary response to protect their career. When sabotage targets job performance (especially files disappearing before client meetings), bypassing informal confrontation is often the correct protocol, as direct confrontation carries risks of escalation, denial, or future retaliation that HR intervention is designed to mitigate.
While the coworker’s personal circumstances (being a single mother) elicit empathy, those circumstances do not excuse deliberate workplace sabotage. The emotional labor of constantly looking over one’s shoulder and questioning one’s competence due to a coworker’s actions is a significant burden. The OP should recognize that HR’s role is to protect the company from liability and ensure professional standards are maintained; termination was the consequence of the coworker’s proven actions, not solely the OP’s report. Moving forward, the OP should maintain professional distance from those offering veiled criticism and focus on reinforcing the professional necessity of their decision.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.












The original poster (OP) is struggling with the emotional fallout of reporting a coworker’s sabotage, which resulted in that coworker’s immediate termination. While the OP acted to protect their professional standing against malicious career interference, the knowledge that the terminated coworker is a single mother has introduced significant guilt and external judgment regarding the severity of the consequence.
Given that the coworker engaged in deliberate, documented attempts to undermine the OP’s job performance, was the OP correct in escalating the matter directly to Human Resources, or would a direct, private confrontation have been a more ethical first step, balancing professional protection against personal empathy?







