Most people look forward to fireworks, barbecues, and time with family on the 4th of July. But for one IT team, their holiday plans were blown up when a VP declared they’d be required to sit in the office all day, no working from home, no excuses. To make it worse, the VP sneered, “It’s just IT, you guys don’t have lives.”
Instead of sulking, their manager took those words to heart… and twisted them into the most spectacular act of workplace revenge. With the company’s credit card and a green light to “go wild,” he transformed the forced office day into an unforgettable event.
What started as a holiday shift turned into a catered feast, a family gathering, and a fireworks show, leaving the VP fuming and upper management demanding answers.
One IT manager is told his team must work on a national holiday, in person, no WFH and decides to comply in the most memorable way possible



At heart, the OP’s issue is one of fair expectations and respect. He was asked to deliver full staffing on July 4, a day many treat as sacrosanct rest time. His team already had plans.
The opposing view: leadership may argue that certain operations (like IT) require coverage even on holidays, and that “everyone must pitch in.”
To that, the OP counters that requiring presence merely to prevent “gaming the system” is demeaning, especially when this team already labors under typical overwork. When leadership dismisses “it’s just IT, you don’t have lives,” that reveals not an operational necessity but a cultural devaluation of certain workgroups.
Broadening the lens, the story touches on a shifting social expectation: in modern work culture, holidays are increasingly understood not as optional perks but as well-earned recovery time.
According to HR Grapevine, 66% of workers report they struggle to mentally disconnect while on vacation, and 68% feel anxious if they don’t check work messages while away. That statistic underlines that the boundary between “time off” and “always on” is vanishing for many employees.
Leadership scholars also warn that burnout is often baked into managerial behaviors.
In Mitigating Workplace Burnout Through Transformational Leadership, the authors point out that leaders who publicly respect non-work boundaries set a tone that rest actually matters, rather than penalizing absence through suspicion. In other words, setting up a holiday party isn’t just revenge, it’s a gesture that time off must be honored.
Advice? First, document the business case, show how operations remain stable even when IT does light support only. Second, propose a rotating holiday schedule to share burden fairly.
Third, run your “party protest” only with transparency: inform leadership that you’ll observe the holiday and offer celebratory compensation. Finally, open a dialogue about why your team’s work is always undervalued and seek policy change.
Here’s what Redditors had to say:
Commenters praised the manager’s creativity and said the team will “work their tails off” for a boss like that

Some zeroed in on the “you don’t have lives” dig, calling it dehumanizing and applauding the respectful, family-friendly alternative

One Redditor shared a parallel story

Another noted the masterstroke of inviting families, creating loyalty that recruiters can’t easily outbid

Forced holiday shifts with no real need cost more than brisket, they cost trust. When the CEO learned only IT worked and nothing broke, the fireworks moved to the boardroom, and policies changed.
Would you have gone full “creative compliance,” or pushed for a quiet cancellation? And how should companies balance real coverage with real lives? Share your hot takes below!








