rSlash - r/Maliciouscompliance My Boss Wants to Slap a Pregnant Lady!
Episode Date: August 19, 2022https://www.youtube.com/rslash Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices...
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Welcome to our slash malicious compliance where OP gets her Karen manager fired.
Our next reddit post is from Jumpy Conclusion. About 15 years ago, I worked in a large hospital
for kids in the maintenance department. Our manager, let's call her Karen, was a major beward.
No one on our team liked her, and we outwardly showed no respect for her after her constant
harassment towards us in the two years that she worked there.
She would call us on the maintenance radios and be rude or tell the guys that they were being incompetent.
It was beyond micromanagement, but on top of that she was also rude.
She expected the maintenance guys to come to work at her house for free, or she would tell some of the hospital vendors
that she would guarantee the hospital contract
if they did work at her house for cheap. She used to brag about this to me. Karen and I were the only
women in our department of about 25 people. I was a mouthy 20-something year old and I didn't care
for her attitude, so I would just say, yeah, sure, whatever, whenever she asked me to do things.
I would do what she asked because it was my job, but I would have made a non-committal
remark like that. One time she asked me to come to her house and help her pull down some
dead trees in her backyard since she was having a pool installed.
I said no because I would knew that for someone that I actually liked, let alone her.
And pretty soon after that, she started treating me even worse than she did before.
She had been trying to get me in trouble ever since then.
Such as seizing her buddy and HR and all emails to me because she wanted all of my replies
and writing.
Fast forward six months later.
Me and one of the maintenance guys were chatting in the office and I was 5 months pregnant
with my first baby.
Karen asked me to do something.
I don't remember what, but I said, yeah, whatever, sure. I'll do that in a few minutes.
Then I turned back around to talk to my coworker. She was standing behind me and I heard her whisper.
I wish I could slap the s*** out of you. I could tell that my coworker heard her say that too,
and I made no comment, but I was shocked.
I acted like I didn't hear her though.
She left the office a minute later to do something.
I got up and walked down the hall to the employee health department because I was fuming,
and my heart was racing.
I was pissed.
Also, I was five months pregnant.
The nurse had me lay down for a bit, take my vitals, and write up a formal report.
An hour later, she sent me back to my desk as an okay to continue working.
When I logged back in, I saw an email from Karen, with HRCC'd, asking where I'd been
for the last hour because she called the office phone a bunch of times, and I'd abandoned
my desk.
So, I emailed her back.
I apologized for being away from my desk. So, I emailed her back. I apologized for being away from my desk. When you said
that you'd like to slap the s*** out of me, I was so upset that I had to be calmed down
and have both mine and my baby's vitals checked at employee health. They were concerned about
my hostile working environment and wanted me to stay there for the full hour. I made
sure that I see-seed her buddy in HR, the rest of HR, Karen's boss, and
Karen's boss's boss to make sure that everyone saw it. I was summoned to HR about 30 minutes
later. I knew that Karen hadn't seen my reply yet. This was in the early 2000s and her
computer was down in the office near me, so she couldn't check her email with her phone.
They had me go home for the day and they put me on admin leave for three extra days. I came back to the office to see Karen's desk had been
emptied out and I never saw her again. Those guys in maintenance threw me the
best baby shower ever three months later. It's so funny because normally baby
showers is like an all woman event. So, the Opie said that she and Karen were
the only women. so it's just
funny to think of what, that be 23 guys all throwing a baby shower when typically there's
no men and baby showers.
Our next reddit post is from Wabisabi Girl.
This story was related to me by one of my favorite professors over five years ago, so
my apologies if the details are foggy or inaccurate. My professor was a very, very private person.
The sort of guy who would hesitate to tell you his favorite color if you had known him
long enough.
He recently had an incredibly nosy couple move in next door, and he realized that the flimsy
4-foot fence that he had got for his dog wouldn't keep out peeping eyes.
So he installed a new fence.
But instead of using a standard size fence,
which he knew his neighbors would peer over, he built an 8-foot fence. It wasn't even a week
before the Homeowners Association started writing him. Threatening every fine they could and claiming
that he couldn't have a fence over 6 feet tall. So being a beautiful citizen, he called the fence
company to uninstall that fence.
While the fence was being taken down, he closely examined the HOA handbook on the precise
definition of fence.
So he installed a new 6 foot fence that fit every single regulation.
But with a 3 foot brick wall beneath it, beneath that we had this story from Embarrassed
Block. This reminds me of a guy this toy from Embarrassed Block.
This reminds me of a guy that I worked with many years ago. He wanted a huge concrete wall
next to his driveway. I'm talking the entire length of his land, so huge. City planning
didn't allow it. There was no chance that he would be permitted to put something so
large on the border of his land. He was a well off dude, so he let his lawyers loose on the matter because he really wanted that wall. A month later,
his wall was there with a mailbox fixed to it. All of this was within the city planning law,
of course. It turns out city planning stated that he could build a mailbox on a fixed structure.
However, they never gave precise size requirements for that fixed structure. Our next reddit post is from Gopfixon. We had someone who was
promoted to a management position, one step up on a very tall ladder and
instantly became a tyrant. For a month she made her lives hell and
micromanaged every step of the way. One day she got upset over a relatively
minor mistake and sent us an all caps email lambasting us for the error. One day, she got upset over a relatively minor mistake and sent us an all-caps email
lambasting us for the error. In the email, she told us that if we couldn't do something
so simple, we should start to consider other places to work because this wasn't a good fit.
Keep in mind, most of us have been working here for a while, and our team was one of the
top performing teams in the region. Of her team of four, she received her fourth
resignation letter today, just a week and a half after her email. Our next reddit posted
from the ex who didn't care. I was working at the postal station from hell. I had a piece
of rolling equipment get caught in a piece of broken tile and then pop up and land on my toe.
It shattered the toenail. I was lucky not to have a broken toe from
it too. So as a result, I was put on light duty, which meant that I had to work the service
window where people come to pick up packages, signature required mail, fill out change of
address forms, stuff like that. Remember, I have a foot injury. This means that getting
around is not easy for me. I have a customer come in about an hour before closing.
They hand over to, pick up your mail forms for certified letters.
Y'all probably don't realize this, but in big city facilities, we don't have your certified
mail sitting in a gold case all by itself, with postal workers just staring wistfully at
it, wondering when we're gonna see you.
No, we have your mail sorted out by the last number of your street address and trades with hundreds of other certified letters just like yours.
This means that it can take quite a while for us to find your mail when you finally drag
your button to pick it up. So, I go looking for these two letters. It was recent enough that I
checked the standby cubby that we had for these types of letters. Ugh, not there. So I hobbled to the longer-term storage area about 10 feet from the door.
I finally find both letters and go to the window. The customer tells me he wants to talk to the
postmaster because I took three minutes to get his mail and that was unacceptable. I tried to convince
him to get the party more likely to be on the premises to handle his complaint. My supervisor,
but nope. He's adamant about speaking to the postmaster. Here's a hint for all you people.
The later in the day it is, the less likely the postmaster will be there. But okay, you want the
postmaster? You get the postmaster. I smile and tell him, sure, I'll go get him now, and I shut the Dutch door. With his mail still in my hand.
You thought that 3 minutes was a long way?
Huh, you just activated a Union worker trap card, Bub.
So I went to the postmaster's office first, but as usual, he wasn't in there.
Still, I made a good faith effort to look for him there.
I didn't see him on the floor either, so I checked the dock.
I also checked the break room. I knocked on the men's room door. No answer. Whoops!
That soda just worked its way through me. I need to use the lady's room now.
I was about to check the parking lot to see if his car was even there. Oh look!
There's the postmaster coming back from an off-site meeting. I take the time to bring him up to speed on the customer's complaint.
The postmaster knew me, knew about my toe, and smiled.
How long have you kept him waiting now?
Hmm, I think it's been 20, 25 minutes.
You can deal with him while I handle the paperwork.
This will be fun.
You're lucky that I like you because you're a hard worker, though.
The customer was absolutely livid when the door finally opened again.
He demanded that I be fired right then and there.
As if that's how it works in a union job.
My boss, to his credit, chewed out the customer for being such a jerk to an injured employee,
who had actually done a great job in taking only three minutes to find two letters amongst
hundreds and two separate locations. who had actually done a great job in taking only 3 minutes to find 2 letters amongst hundreds
and 2 separate locations.
He even took one of the mail trays over to the ledge, slammed it down and said, see how long
it would take you to go through this to find not 1 but 2 letters, and then tell me that
3 minutes is too long.
The lessons to be learned, if union workers don't have to take crap off dirt bags, we won't.
So spare yourself a whole lot of grief and chill the F out.
It's only male for crying out loud.
Our next reddit post is from Patient House.
My ex-employer announced some news regarding our jobs.
It was obviously false, but instead of calling out the BS, I treated it exactly as though
it were true and it bounced back in their face.
This happened a while ago when I was working in a community-based organization.
We provided into the line shelter for people and we did write advocacy in a medium-sized
town of about 100,000 people.
The salary was low, but most employees were there because we believed in what we did.
The main problem was the manager.
She did not act in accordance to the set of values the organization was based on.
She was grossly overpaid compared to employees. She took everything personally. She made sure we
were cut off from administrators and she created an atmosphere where people feared retribution.
We were unionized, but after a few months I realized no one was ever filing complaints, even for trivial
matters, because they feared that she was going to lash back at them.
It turns out she had done this exact thing to a few people in the past.
Once I decided that I wasn't going to stay there much longer, I decided to sign all
the complaints that I could.
I figured I would see them to the end and then leave.
That way, administrators couldn't claim not knowing, and there was
a chance for my colleague to have a better work environment. So, of course, the next few months for
me were a living hell. She picked on me regularly. Still, most of my colleagues cited with me,
at least privately. One morning, she calls a staff meeting, and she explains that a large amount
of complaints have been filed in the last month.
She looks at me and then continues.
She says the costs to settle them or to pay the lawyers to fight them might bankrupt the
organization and thus everyone is at risk of losing their job.
Panic ensues.
My colleagues start crying, they're calling their significant others and a lot of people
are begging me to take the complaints back stating that she got the lesson
Some of them are genuinely pissed at me in my opinion
This was obviously BS to turn them against me. I mean the sole emergency housing option in this city would be closed for a dozen complaints
Where I'm not even asking for money in any form over legal fees which are usually budgeted for in advance?
Come on, this is basic fear mongering. Normally I would have questioned it during the meeting
or tried to reason with them afterwards. But this time I decided to comply with that
narrative and treat it as true. I left for my break and I did what I would have done
if we were really closing. Appeal to the public outrage to help us fulfill our mission.
I called the news.
I told them verbatim, the morning announcement,
the service hall this would create in the community
and the job impact that it would have in the city, et cetera.
The local news actually picked it up.
They called the manager and administrators
about running the story.
They questioned why there were enough complaints
to threaten a 35 year old pillar of the community services, asking what
the complaints were about, etc. Before 4pm that same day, we had a second meeting
to explain that we must have misunderstood the first meeting because the
organization was in no way shape or form in danger of closing. Sure, we must
have misunderstood.
Moral of the story.
Let those who brewed the piss drink it.
Our next reddit post is from Arcam TV.
I used to work at a mom and pop store that sold clothes, farm supplies, animals, and sporting
goods.
Anyway, since we sold sporting goods, we also sold bait fish.
Fishermen would frequently stop by our store to buy them to fish with, and they were sold
by the dozen.
Usually, when I scooped bait, I would give a few extra fish to my customers. I had this one
Russian lady come into purchase baitfish, so just as I normally did, I scooped a net full of fish
and started dumping them in the bag, counting them individually, and then I added a few extra to the
bag. The lady watched me do this, but she insisted that I didn't give her the correct
amount. I assured her that not only did I give her the dozen that she paid for, but I
also gave her a few extra. I literally just counted them, and I've
done this for long enough that I was really good at eyeballing when it was over a dozen
fish. This lady just kept insisting that I didn't give her enough, so I said, okay,
let's count together
just to be sure. So I dump all the fish from the bag back into the net, and we started
counting together very slowly. One, two, three, four, etc. We get to 12, and it's very clear
there are several extra fish still in the net. I look up at her and I was like, oh you were right, I didn't
give you the right amount. I then proceeded to dump the remaining fish back into the tank
right in front of her and gave her exactly the amount that she paid for. She ended up just
looking bewildered when I handed the fish back to her and she left. That was our slash malicious
compliance and if you like this content be sure to follow my podcast because I put out
And she left!
That was our Slash Malicious Compliance, and if you liked this content, be sure to follow
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