In the suffocating world of late-night customer support, a woman found herself trapped in a relentless cycle of abuse and neglect. Tasked with soothing the frustrations of entitled customers, she and her colleagues bore the brunt of cruelty without a shield from their own management, who prioritized profits over their well-being. The rules meant to protect them were twisted into a cruel joke, allowing harassment to thrive unchecked and leaving them powerless against the torment.
Every shift became a battleground where decency was a fragile illusion, shattered repeatedly by the same offenders who exploited the system’s pathetic loopholes. Despite the relentless verbal assaults and obscene behavior, the company’s lax policies ensured that the abusers faced no lasting consequences. In this toxic environment, the woman’s resilience was tested, her dignity worn thin, as she endured the unbearable silence of a system designed to protect predators rather than the people who served them.

A customer abused our support staff, so I let her know that she wasn’t as anonymous as she thought she was.



















According to Dr. Beverly Engel, an expert in emotional abuse, the behavior exhibited by the customer, Kathy, clearly constitutes psychological harassment. Engel notes that abusers often target those they perceive as having less power, exploiting systemic weaknesses to maintain control and inflict distress. The OP was in a classic vulnerable position: employed in a low-status, high-stress role where managerial sanctioning of abuse was absent.
The OP’s initial motivation was self-preservation and seeking justice within an unjust system. The company’s ‘one day turnover’ policy created an environment where abusive behavior was normalized and perpetually available, shifting the emotional labor entirely onto the staff. When the OP discovered Kathy was a therapist, it created a severe cognitive dissonance—a violation of trust in a profession dedicated to care. The OP’s subsequent action, masquerading as a client to confront Kathy, was an attempt to rebalance the power dynamic by using Kathy’s own professional setting against her.
While the OP’s feelings of anger and need for redress are understandable given the prolonged trauma, impersonating a prospective client in a professional therapeutic setting presents ethical concerns regarding professional boundaries and potential legal risk, even if the outcome silenced the abuse. A more constructive future approach, after leaving the job, would have involved reporting the therapist’s conduct to their relevant professional licensing board, leveraging formal regulatory channels rather than personal confrontation.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.







The original poster (OP) endured severe, repeated emotional abuse while working in customer support, facing a system that completely failed to protect them. Their decision to quit was a direct response to this toxic environment and the lack of managerial support.
The core conflict lies between the OP’s right to safety and the company’s policy prioritizing customer retention over employee well-being. Was the OP’s final act of retaliation justified as a form of ultimate boundary setting, or did it cross an ethical line by using deception to retaliate against a professional?







