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Secretary Turns Boss’s Brutal Two-Week Notice Rule Against Him And Walks Out In Victory

by Jeffrey Stone
December 4, 2025
in Social Issues

On day one in the polished law firm, the arrogant attorney bragged he never accepted two-week notices. Eight months later, his sharp-witted secretary decided it was her time to go. She phoned in sick while secretly interviewing elsewhere, then sauntered in at noon, calmly declared “I quit,” and finished the day’s work like nothing happened.

When closing time came and the stunned lawyer pleaded for her to at least stay the week because she’d left them “in a hard spot,” she smiled sweetly, reminded him of his own famous policy, collected her final paycheck, and strutted out the door with the biggest victory grin the building had ever seen.

A 1993 secretary used her boss’s “no two-week notices” policy against him when quitting.

Secretary Turns Boss’s Brutal Two-Week Notice Rule Against Him And Walks Out In Victory
Not the actual photo.

'Two-Week Notices Not Accepted'

It's 1993, and my first day of work as a secretary for a high-powered attorney in my hometown.

He brags that, when people give a two-week notice, he immediately takes their office key, has them clean out their desk, and hands them a final paycheck.

After 8 months of working for him, I call in "needing extra rest" one morning (I was at a job interview), then go in at 1 p.m. and tell him...

He asks me to finish out the day's work, which I do. At the end of the day, he comes to my desk and asks me to at least finish...

stating I put them in a hard spot for not giving a two-week notice.

I remind him that on my first day of employment he told me he did not accept two-week notices and that is why I did not give a two-week notice.

I received my final paycheck and walked out with a smile on my face!

Our 1993 secretary didn’t just quit. She served cold, hard malicious compliance on a silver platter, using the attorney’s own policy as the ultimate uno-reverse card.

On one side, the boss probably thought he was being clever: why keep someone who’s mentally checked out? Many companies still operate this way, fearing sabotage or coasting in those final weeks. Yet the move almost always backfires spectacularly.

When employees see loyalty punished, morale tanks and résumés start flying. The secretary’s story is a perfect reminder that workplace relationships are a two-way street: if you treat people like they’re disposable, don’t be shocked when they dispose of you without notice.

This ties into a much bigger conversation about “quiet quitting” and the death of traditional notice periods.

A 2025 Gateway Commercial Finance survey of over 1,000 professionals found that 30% of Gen Z workers have “ghosted” an employer by quitting without notice, viewing jobs as temporary “situationships” rather than lifelong commitments, especially when treated poorly.

The Great Resignation taught employees that companies rarely hesitate to lay people off with zero warning, so the social contract has quietly crumbled.

Software engineer Zaid Khan, a self-described quiet quitter, explained in a Sydney Morning Herald interview: “You’re still performing your duties, but you’re no longer subscribing to the hustle-culture mentality that work has to be your life.”

That quote hits harder than ever here. The attorney bragged about instant dismissal, so he shouldn’t have been surprised when his own employee took him at his word.

The healthy solution is pretty simple: treat departures with respect. Pay out unused vacation, keep bridges intact, maybe even throw in a reference. Companies that do this, enjoy ridiculously low turnover and a constant stream of boomerang employees.

The ones that don’t? They end up exactly where our attorney did: watching their perfectly trained secretary waltz out the door with zero remorse. Lesson learned.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

Some people say treating employees well when they give notice pays off with loyalty, references, and smooth transitions.

Gryffindorphins − I had the opposite happen. I was made redundant as the business was failing and they couldn’t afford to keep me.

It was a family owned business and being one of three non-family members working there, I knew it was coming.

They had treated me very well and I asked if they wanted me to finish off the week, say goodbye to clients, finish or handover my tasks and shortcuts, etc.

The boss, normally a very stoic and unemotional man, teared up and said no employee had ever offered that before.

I had seen a few storm out in the past myself. I only ended up needing to stay an extra day

but I’ve always had glowing reviews and references from that business from everyone since. It was a nice way to finish working somewhere.

keithww − My wife was the only one at her company who had her job title, she gave 60 day notice.

They asked her to stay 120 and then gave her a bonus for staying the extra two months. We had to delay some plans, but it was well worth it.

Eckleburgseyes − I have an old friend who runs a political consulting firm. When he has employees give their two weeks notice he… pays them their unused vacation, their discretionary...

as well as their accrued sick leave, even though he has no obligation to pay out the bonus or the sick leave.

Not only does he have very little turnover, but good employees often return to him later.

Some people share stories of employers instantly firing or punishing employees who give notice, causing backlash and loss of respect.

otterplus − I had an employer who was a complete d__k. One guy was getting ready to go off to college and put in his two weeks.

Right there on the work floor he said “I don’t need you, you may as well just leave now”. That employer lost a lot of respect points from me that...

nighthawke75 − I was working support supervisor for a rinkydink WISP and had one under my wing that was performing pretty good.

One day he put in his two weeks due to him going off to college. OK, fine, the holiday weekend was coming up and I really needed him to cover...

I come in the next day, only to find out upper level management cut his two weeks short and put him out the door that same day. I hit the...

I dragged both bosses in on the deck and lit into them that we needed that tech to cover the weekend as scheduled.

veknilero − Gave my two weeks after 6 years at Target many years ago, the manager looked at me and said "I don't want your two weeks,

just leave then wrote it like a termination" so I couldn't use as a reference or be rehired there.

Some people believe two weeks’ notice is dead and employees should now walk out immediately because companies show no loyalty.

[Reddit User] − Good. Giving two weeks notice is old school. Walk out and tell them that today was your last day.

In case you're wondering: corporations don't give a s__t about you.

sixft7in − Employers these days think the leaving employees will do as much damage on the way out or that they won't actually do their job, so the just fire...

Some people used the notice period for petty revenge or to enjoy the power shift after bad treatment.

comedygene − I had a boss who had s__t benefits. One of them was not moving holidays to the nearest Friday or Monday. We just lost it. I

told them that means we lose 15% of our holidays. Did not care. When I turned in my 2 weeks notice, (after burning up all my sick time and holiday...

So after getting back from vacation, I turned in my 2 weeks.

- It's not a 2 week notice because there is a holiday on next Monday

- You don't honor holidays on the weekend. I don't honor holidays during the week. So will you say I am eligible for rehire if they call for a reference?

- No.

- Oh well I guess today is my last day since you have nothing to offer me. Cya.

Speaker4theDead8 − My last job, they forced my boss to resign, fired my peer and everybody else switched to different departments.

That's when I said f__k it and turned in my resignation. They begged me to stay on part time to help retrain a brand new staff who had never done...

It was amazing. I would show up whenever I wanted (or not show up) in sweatpants and a hoodie

and answer all their frantic questions for as long as I felt like it. I hope they f__king learned their lesson, but probably not.

Thirty-plus years later and this 1993 secretary is still the undisputed queen of holding people to their own ridiculous rules. Would you have smiled just as wide walking out the door, or do you think two weeks is still the classy move when the company deserves it? Drop your own workplace war stories below!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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