Denied Christmas Vacation for Years, but This Time… the Boss Never Saw It Coming
Every December, the same painful routine played out. She asked for a single week off to visit her family — a simple Christmas break everyone else seemed to get without question. And every year, her boss turned her down with that practiced smile and the same excuse: “We need you here. Maybe next time.”
This year, she tried something different.
She filed her request in June, months before anyone else even thought about holiday schedules. She planned ahead, did everything by the book, and even reminded her boss politely in the fall. She hoped, just once, she could spend the holidays with the people she loved.
Then last week, the approvals came in.
One coworker. Then another. Then the third.
By the time the fourth celebration email popped up, she already knew.
Her request was missing.
She approached her boss, trying to stay calm.
His answer? A shrug.
“You should be a team player since you don’t have kids. They need the time more than you do.”
The words stung. As if not having children made her life — her family — less important. But instead of arguing, she simply smiled.
And walked away.
What he didn’t know was that she’d already made a decision the moment he dismissed her: she was done being treated as the office backup plan.
Yesterday, he froze when he saw what she did next.
Her resignation letter — clean, professional, and effective immediately — was sitting on his desk.
And taped beside it?
A copy of every approved time-off request… including hers from June. The one he ignored.
Her coworkers later said he went pale.
For the first time in years, she’ll spend Christmas exactly where she belongs — with her family — and for once, on her own terms.