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Manager Told Her She Couldn’t Take A Break Unless She Smoked, Challenge Accepted

by Layla Bui
October 28, 2025
in Social Issues

If you’ve ever worked somewhere that lets smokers step outside every hour for “just five minutes,” you know the frustration. Non-smokers keep working while the nicotine crowd gets extra breaks.

One young cleaner from Toronto, however, decided she wasn’t going to just accept it. When her boss told her she couldn’t join the “smoke breaks” because she didn’t actually smoke, she came up with a solution so brilliant, and so sparkly, that even her manager couldn’t be mad.

Non-smoker banned from breaks; brings sparklers, claims “smoke”

Manager Told Her She Couldn’t Take A Break Unless She Smoked, Challenge Accepted
not the actual photo

'Boss told me I couldn't take a smoke break if I wasn't smoking?'

I first started working at 17 as a housekeeper cleaning condos in downtown Toronto. It wasn't a bad gig.

The building was under construction (finishing units and such)

so there was quite a bit of dust but other than that it was fairly easy work and at the time I was getting above minimum wage.

I was the only cleaner in the building but I was good friends with the security guards

and would hang out with them on most of my breaks.

They were all smokers and I noticed that they were taking small break

so if I happen to be near them when they were taking a smoke break I would hang out with them.

My boss was a sweet guy, but he did casually mention that the smoke breaks

for smokers only and I couldn't just hang out with them.

Next break I had I sat down with the security guards

and they joked that I should just have a cigarette in my hand but not actually smoke it.

That's when I decided to be a little bit creative with my malicious compliance.

The next day I came into work with a small pack of sparklers.

I kept them in my pocket and when I saw the security guards taking a smoke break,

I went out with them pulled out a sparkler lit it up and just kind of stood there with them as the sparkler went off.

We all had a good chuckle about it.

The boss saw me and came outside probably to talk to me about not taking a smoke break if I wasn't a smoker,

but he saw the sparkler in my hand.

The security guards pointed out that technically, I was 'smoking' as the sparkler was producing little bits of smoke.

The boss laughed it off, apologized, and said that as long as I get my work done,

I can take smoke breaks with the others with or without the sparklers.

In workplace settings, rest and break periods are key for maintaining health, safety, productivity, and fairness among employees.

According to the U.S. Department of Labor, short breaks of 5–20 minutes must be counted as hours worked if the employer permits them.

However, the law also states that employers are not required to provide additional breaks for smokers specifically, outside any standard break schedule.

This means that while an employer may allow a “smoke break,” such a break is not automatically a legal right, nor must non-smokers be given equivalent special breaks by statute.

The key underlying principle is equal treatment: if smokers are taking extra breaks that non-smokers cannot access, it can create perceptions of unfairness, erode morale, and reduce workplace cohesion.

From a psychological standpoint, when a non-smoker joins smokers on break without doing so for the same reason, or when the policy is enforced in an arbitrary or inconsistent way, it may spark resentment or disengagement.

Organizational behaviour studies show that perceived unfairness in break allocation affects job satisfaction and commitment.

In the situation described, the employee found a creative workaround (taking a sparkler “smoke” break) that exposed the inconsistency in the employer’s policy: smokers were permitted extra time, while non-smokers were explicitly told they could not partake unless they smoked.

The employer’s eventual decision, allowing the non-smoker to join the breaks, was a practical resolution that restored equity and reduced internal friction.

Best practices for employers include:

  • Establishing a clear, written break-policy that applies equally to all employees.
  • Ensuring that any additional break privileges (e.g., for smokers) don’t disadvantage non-smokers or create morale issues.
  • Monitoring informal group breaks to confirm they do not undermine productivity or fairness.
  • Communicating transparently about break rights, expectations, and the reason breaks are given.

Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:

These Redditors vented about unfair smoke-break rules and joked about creative equality

AdditionalTheory − I always thought that if smokers get a 15 minute smoke break

than the rest of us should get a 15 minute break to cry in our cars

HoraceorDoris − At a company I used to work, non-smokers got an extra hour of pay.

The smokers complained, so we lost the pay and they got banned from smoking during work hours

yourscreennamesucks − I used to smoke. Then I quit. Then I started realizing how much extra work

I was doing so all the smokers could have their breaks.

So I stopped working when they would all go out and management got huffy lol.

Either we all get a break or nobody should.

ratadeacero − My non smoking employees got air breaks where they got to lounge in the sun for 5 to 10 min.

Karl2241 − Had something like this happen to me when I was in the military,

I didn’t smoke, but those who did would take off to smoke leaving me alone with all their work.

So one day I bought a pack of those candy cigarettes.

Where they surprised when I started following them out, and there was a big laugh about it.

They understood the point, let’s share the work load better. Good times.

Commenters shared lighthearted stories of good managers or fair break policies that worked

Em_the_Strange − lol well done. Honestly, this idea that only smokers get smoke breaks is such a silly one.

Back when I was in the army, as a non-smoker, I'd go with the smokers everytime they took a smoke break.

Like come on, what do they think was gonna get accomplished with about 75% of the staff on break anyway?

Luckily they never did try to micromanage like your boss did. glad he saw sense in the end.

simple_observer86 − I worked in a retail store and my manager was a smoker.

I’d be elbow deep in organizing something and she’d walk by and tell me we are going for a smoke break.

I’m not a smoker and she knew that, but if she was taking a break she said it’s only fair if I get one too.

She did this with everyone we worked with. She made working retail bearable.

KPinCVG − Around 20 years ago, my employer built a covered area with two picnic tables underneath it for the smokers.

My coworker had an absolute tantrum. Dressed HR up and down.

And demanded not that they get rid of the area, but that they also put in an area for non-smokers.

A few months later, at a respectable distance from the smoking area,

a non-smoking area that was covered with two picnic tables showed up!

In case it's important, this site did not have any outdoor seating areas before this.

So the two covered areas were the only places to sit outside.

This user applauded the boss for realizing the policy was silly and letting OP join in

[Reddit User] − At least the boss in this case recognized how stupid that policy was and caved.

I've bitched about the smoke break thing before at work, and any time I brought it up,

I've never had a boss that didn't begrudgingly agree that if they could go outside and smoke on the clock,

I could go for a short walk, grab a cup of coffee, etc.

As long as I was back by the time they finished their cigarettes, I was in the clear.

One commenter reflected on how military environments normalize smoking to get extra breaks

USAF6F171 − Military "forces" a lot of youngsters to start smoking this way at Basic Training.

It’s funny how one teenager’s sparkler solved what HR departments have debated for decades. Her boss could’ve doubled down on policy, but instead, he laughed and learned something valuable: a fair workplace keeps everyone happier (and more productive).

Sometimes the best way to change the rules isn’t a protest or a complaint form, it’s a little creative compliance and a pack of dollar-store fireworks.

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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