When a team member went on maternity leave two years ago, one employee moved from a noisy cubicle to a quiet corner office with a window view. It wasn’t stolen, just reassigned with manager approval. For two peaceful years, it became home – coffee mug, plant, and all.
Now, with the company ending remote work and summoning everyone back by mid-November, the original occupant has returned… and she’s not happy.
She wants her old office back. But the boss made it clear: the space is no longer hers. It’s officially assigned. Cue the awkward stares, passive-aggressive sighs, and one guilt-ridden email accusing the new occupant of being “unfair.”

This Redditor’s office upgrade saga is a masterclass in “possession is nine-tenths of the policy”























A Clash Over Cubicle Real Estate
Here’s how it unfolded. Jenn, the original office owner, went on maternity leave in 2023 and later transitioned to working from home full time.
Fast-forward to 2025: the work-from-home policy ends, and Jenn’s back in the building. She spots Alex in her old office and immediately demands it back, calling the situation “unfair.” But the company’s stance is firm – office spaces don’t automatically revert to former occupants.
Alex keeps the room. Jenn fires off an emotional email claiming she’s being “punished” after returning from maternity leave.
The rest of the office? Split down the middle – some whispering about “respect,” others saying “policy’s policy.”
The Other Side of the Story
Jenn’s frustration isn’t hard to understand. She left for a valid reason and may have assumed her workspace would wait for her.
For some employees, their office feels like a personal space – a reflection of their identity and seniority.
But the truth is simpler: once vacated, it’s not “your” office anymore. The company’s workspace policy treats all offices as shared assets, not personal property.
When Alex moved in with official approval, the assignment became legitimate.
As one Redditor joked, “You don’t get your desk back after two years – it’s not a rent-to-own deal.”
The Bigger Picture: Return-to-Office Tension
Since 2023, companies worldwide have been tightening remote work policies.
According to the 2025 Gallup Workplace Report, about 60% of remote employees still resist full-time return-to-office mandates, leading to a rise in workplace friction and, surprisingly, desk disputes.
For many, the issue isn’t just physical space. Offices symbolize hierarchy, comfort, and recognition. When employees lose those spaces, resentment can simmer.
That’s why some HR departments now use transparent bidding systems to allocate office spots, reducing favoritism but sometimes fueling jealousy.
Expert Insight: “Offices Aren’t Heirlooms”
Human Resources expert Suzanne Lucas, known as the Evil HR Lady, summed it up perfectly in an interview with CNBC:
“Offices aren’t heirlooms — assignment follows policy, not sentiment. Fighting it creates toxicity; accept and adapt.”
Her words hit the heart of this situation. Workplace fairness depends on consistency, not nostalgia. Management followed the rules, Alex followed the process, and Jenn’s insistence – however emotional – could cross into unprofessional territory if it continues.
Handling the Office Cold War
Alex’s next moves matter. Staying professional is key:
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Document everything. Keep a copy of that guilt-tripping email.
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Stay polite but firm. Reference company policy if the topic resurfaces.
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Loop in HR if colleagues’ gossip turns into hostility.
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Avoid public debates. Watercooler wars never end well.
Experts also recommend focusing on performance. The more Alex demonstrates professionalism and results, the quicker tensions fade. Office grudges burn out faster when met with calm competence.
Here’s what people had to say to OP:
The online crowd came prepared with snark, sympathy, and solid advice:






Many praised Alex for staying composed while sticking to policy.



Others empathized with Jenn’s shock but admitted emotions shouldn’t rewrite office rules.
















Alex followed the system and kept the office. Jenn’s anger may come from a place of hurt, but company policies exist for a reason: to keep things fair for everyone.
The real test now? Whether the team can move past whispers and focus on work instead of walls.
Would you stand your ground or give the office back for peace? And how do you handle workplace guilt when following the rules makes you the villain? Drop your takes – let’s talk about who really owns “the good office.”









