In a workplace where maternity and paternity leave is a precious and hard-earned benefit, one woman’s future dreams clash with a colleague’s immediate crisis. She has diligently saved her leave for years, holding onto the hope of starting a family, only to be blindsided by a desperate request that challenges her boundaries and values.
When Mark asks to borrow leave that isn’t his to give, the tension between compassion and fairness ignites. Her refusal, rooted in protecting her own future, sparks accusations and cold judgments, unraveling the fragile balance of workplace support and personal sacrifice.

AITA for refusing to “lend” my maternity leave to my male coworker who wants more paternity leave?







Dr. Amy Cuddy, a social psychologist known for her work on power dynamics and belonging, often discusses how perceived fairness and resource allocation impact workplace relationships. In this scenario, Mark approached the leave as a shared community resource rather than an individually earned benefit, leading to a fundamental misunderstanding of entitlement.
The core conflict here involves perceived entitlement versus established policy. The employee (OP) has earned eight years of service credit, representing a tangible asset tied to their future family planning. Mark’s request, while stemming from a genuine crisis (postpartum depression adds significant complexity and urgency), relies on the assumption that the OP’s future needs are less important than his immediate ones. Calling the OP ‘heartless’ is a tactic often used to enforce social obligations and bypass established rules, creating emotional leverage where policy offers none.
The OP acted appropriately by adhering strictly to the known company policy, which dictates that the leave is non-transferable. Constructively, in future interactions involving sensitive resource sharing, the OP could have acknowledged the difficulty of Mark’s situation (e.g., “I understand this is incredibly hard for you and your wife”) before clearly and calmly reiterating the policy barrier, avoiding personalization of the refusal.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.









The individual faced a difficult situation where their personal plans and earned benefits clashed directly with a coworker’s urgent family need. Despite external pressure and accusations of being unsupportive, the person held firm on their right to their accrued, non-transferable benefits necessary for their future.
Given that the leave policy explicitly forbids transfers, was the individual justified in prioritizing their legally protected, earned benefit over a coworker’s request, even considering the coworker’s wife’s mental health crisis?







