Daily Highlight
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

New Principal Demands Teacher Quit Second Job, Loses Him And Triggers A Staff Exodus Instead

by Annie Nguyen
January 22, 2026
in Social Issues

Starting over under a new boss is always risky, especially when the old one actually understood you. For teachers who already juggle packed schedules, tight budgets, and emotional labor, a leadership change can quietly decide whether a school feels like home or a ticking clock.

In this story, a veteran math teacher finally feels settled after years of bouncing around districts, thanks to a principal who trusts his work and gives him room to breathe. That stability cracks during a casual introduction when the incoming principal makes an offhand remark about his second job, one that lands far heavier than intended.

What follows is not a loud confrontation, but a swift and deliberate response that sets several things in motion. Scroll down to see how a single sentence pushed someone to take their worth seriously.

One longtime teacher’s peaceful routine was shattered when a new principal made an unexpected demand

New Principal Demands Teacher Quit Second Job, Loses Him And Triggers A Staff Exodus Instead
Not the actual photo

“Having a second job won’t cut it with me; you better fix that pronto” ? You got it, dude!?

This pains me to write. I keep going back and forth as to

which of my sentences I should start with , the former or this next one.

Tears are rolling down this old teachers face; a rarity.

I’ve had a fairly rough teaching career.

In my sixteen years of contracted service, I’ve spent five of those in the school I’ve been at this year.

This is a record possible in part due to my eventual kickassedness at teaching algebra,

part from learning when to shut up (always), part learning that the students,

and my care, are all that matters, but mostly due to my great rapport, relationship with my principal .

He gets my quirkiness, knows I’m a great teacher so he doesn’t need to tell me

what he has to others (for the most part), and he’s as hands off as an amazing principal can be.

I’ve finally hit my groove in education when my principal , we’ll call him dr.

J, just got his doctorate and now is moving onward and upward..

S__t. I’m not sure if this is just a school thing,

but he’s doing his farewell tour while introducing us all to the new principal. We’ll call him Not the Mama.

Anyone from the 90s who also has suffered from the New Boss Blues knows my pain, and gets this reference.

During the tour Doctor J tells Not the Mama about me, how I’m the hardest, smartest worker and teacher.

How I have a great relationship with my students, hoe they stop by the school to see me years after.

He also mentions in this live recommendation that I have second job working fast food.

Not the Mama instantly winces at this, right about the same time as everyone’s favorite teacher,

Miss Why-aren’t-you-paying-attention-to-my-ironic-T-shirt,

pops out of a sky filled with irregular sized suspenders

and stories about someone’s relatives that amazingly have no relevance to any person, living or dead.

I’m pretty sure she said something to distract dr.

J long enough to give Not the Mama the opportunity to turn back to me,

like a dad threatening his children into “bein hayve “

while he tries to convince his first date since his wife left him that he’s a great dad.

He manages to quickly mutter under his breath what confirmed every fear

I had about the new boss: “Having a second job won’t cut it with me so you better fix that pronto”.

Reverse jerry McGuire, you lost me at pronto.

You had me at Hell No. I despised this person so much in such a short time that it wasn’t even an afterthought that,

despite my “second” job being minimum wage, and despite my current job just issuing me a longevity bonus (literally yesterday),

I would press the biggest, most important Malicious Compliance button of my life and see how the f__k it goes.

Pronto means soon, so that afternoon I put in my notice that I won’t be coming back.

Hey, he wants me to only have one job right? Voila.

That’s French for Check this s__t out.

Your man OP started going back on School Spring.

Two interviews set up for tomorrow via zoom.

Oh, and I’m pretty sure they’ll be a juicy update, because I just received four missed calls

from Dr.j and I’m going to check my email, as requested by Dr.j. I can’t believe I’m leaving.

Pretty sure he can’t either..

Barely worth reading update. I read Dr.Js email.

It was shorter than the texts, but both basically said he needs to meet with me to find out why I’m suddenly out.

I can tell based on his wording that he suspects it’s the new boss, but he’s never be accused of explicitly saying anything via email.

I didn’t give any reason for making the decision, and he begged me not to send anything officially to district until we talk.

As we’re texting back in forth right now, yes at midnight, he asked how I felt about “Desert Valley”,

the district he’s going to be Director of Pancakes or whatever at.

I’m looking into it right now. But I’ll sleep on it.

Next update in 12 hours ish. Okay.

Nothing iron clad, but three schools need an academic advisor for Math in “Desert Valley”.

He says I’m a shoe in. Pay scale looks promisingly better too.

Update: “Confirmed”. Interviewing with two of the three schools for a job that pays me what I’m worth.

Fingers crossed. On an unrelated note, it appears

that I have people that either really like, or really can’t stand my writing.

Can’t please everybody. Not gonna try. But thanks for the input.

What I HAVE noticed is that those who enjoyed it will give examples of what they liked, you know, claims reasoning and evidence.

Very few who claim I’m a terrible writer give me specifics.

I would like to know how I can improve.

I swear, it’s not just to call out the haters and call them uncreative copypasta whores.

UPdate/Editto: Regardless of whether I land the interview I'm going to later this month at Dr.

J's new district, I will be leaving this place, and have had three teachers come and ask me what's up.

I told them outright that I don't have a good feeling about the new principal. Word is getting around.

I just replied to an email from my closest colleague about this post and what the dude said, verbatim.

She says that about six more teachers will walk too, because they all have second jobs.

The new principal, guaranteed, will probably lose the job before he gets it.

I've seen this type of behavior before, and when the gossip train leaves the station it always comes back with less passengers...

and in this case no conductor.

There's only two options: Option 1: this guy meets with district about the influx of feedback,

as negative as it was instantaneous, and decides to walk.

Option 2: Same beginning, but decides to stay and fight the good fight.

The uphill battle just got a steeper incline for him.

He is such a drastic change from Dr.

J that it's a wonder he got the job in the first place. I'm curious how his interview went.

Either way, I do feel for the kids, because that's who will suffer the most in all of this.

Unhappy teachers are education killers.

But I can't think of all this right now, I have to get my mind right... positive....and forward thinking..

TLDR- Algebra teacher gets a new job and is either a great or terrible writer..

Fallout Boy…, My current/old school is begging for me back.

NTM won’t be principal next year.

Evidently I’m not the only one he rubbed the wrong way.

Still moving forward with interviews…just now I’m in a crevasse of doubt.

Or something else overly described..

Update! I interviewed for two schools, got offers from one already (from the one I didn’t think I did so well at)

and the other I’m pretty sure I’ve got a good shot.

Decided to take the first offer just to have it not looming over my head any longer.

It’s 12000 more per year than current, plus many bonuses tied to school performance

that could extend that to a cool 20,000 (8k in bonuses possible, 1 per school that beats the national average).

Excited to be moving on, and I’ll probably still do Wendy’s until I get a few new checks in the bank.

It’s actually less take home work this new academic coach job. I’m loving it.
In nearly every working life, there comes a moment when people realize that dedication and competence do not always shield them from being misunderstood or controlled.

Authority figures, often under pressure to assert themselves, may act from insecurity rather than care, while those beneath them can experience even a brief dismissal as a deep betrayal.

In this story, both sides are shaped by that imbalance: a veteran teacher struggling to endure a demanding profession, and a new principal asserting power in a way that immediately fractures trust.

From a psychological perspective, OP’s reaction is understandable when viewed through the lens of emotional threat. Teaching for years under financial strain, while maintaining strong relationships with students and consistently performing well, requires significant resilience.

The second job was not a sign of divided commitment; it was a practical coping mechanism within a system that frequently underpays dedication. When the new principal dismissed this reality with a curt “fix that pronto,” it struck directly at OP’s sense of autonomy and self-worth.

Such moments often trigger what psychologists describe as an identity threat, the feeling that one’s values and efforts are being invalidated by authority.

Instead of responding through open confrontation, OP chose malicious compliance. This decision reflects a desire to regain control without escalating conflict. By quitting the second job exactly as instructed and immediately pursuing better opportunities, OP transformed frustration into forward momentum.

Psychologically, this was not impulsive revenge, but a deliberate reclaiming of agency. The emotional trigger was not anger alone, but the fear of being trapped under leadership that showed little respect for personal boundaries.

In this piece, Dr. Broder explains that traditional revenge tends to backfire and that focusing energy on one’s own success and growth can provide a healthier way to reclaim power and psychological balance after being wronged. She discusses how “restoring psychological balance” is a more genuinely satisfying form of emotional recovery than plotting payback, and that revenge can negatively impact mental health, whereas growth and forgiveness can benefit it.

This insight helps explain why OP’s story feels both satisfying and bittersweet. The outcome , improved job prospects, higher pay, and professional validation, brings a sense of closure.

Readers naturally feel a sense of revelry when inflexible leadership faces consequences. Yet the story also acknowledges the collateral impact: students left behind and colleagues caught in institutional instability.

Ultimately, this story is not simply about malicious compliance; it is about boundaries. When people are forced to choose between obedience and dignity, many choose dignity, even at a personal cost. The lingering question is whether workplaces can learn to value humanity before driving away the very people who sustain them.

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These Redditors highlighted how normal second jobs are for teachers

818488899414 − Both of my parents were teachers and both had second/Summer jobs and we were 'okay' financially.

My father was told near the end of career, by a new principal, that he needed to focus on only one job, so my father retired.

The new principal tried to backtrack on his suggestion, but the papers were already filed.

You'll be better off not working for someone like that, that's for sure.

Real-Geologist7781 − Seriously, teachers have second jobs and summer jobs in the USA? ?

And here I (a teacher with a steady 32hrs job living comfortably in the EU) thought only your health insurance system was s__tty.

My American brothers and sisters in arms, you really are the heroes. Or crazy.

This group called out insecure leadership and poor management

lostknight0727 − Not-the-mama(Loved Dinosaurs growing up) tried

to do the educational version of prison yard BS "find the best teacher I have and knock the wind out their sails."

Well congrats you got what you wanted NTM.

Hopefully you find a better job soon.

EdgeMiserable4381 − Never understand why bosses are crap to their best employees and nice to the worst.

Insecurities? Math teachers are Hard to replace.

And tons of school staff have second jobs.

Be sure to let all the parents and kids know why you're leaving

These users reacted strongly to the principal’s tone and attitude.

Redd_October − Voila. That’s French for Check this s__t out. Love it.

NTM fucked around, and now he's going to find out.

Teachers have to put up with enough garbage already, the idea that a principal would walk in

and already start at that level of Hell No before he even finishes his inaugural tour is just absurd.

If NTM didn't know just how thin the ice really was, then it'll be the last lesson you teach at this school.

I hope you find something better, you certainly deserve it.

shamgod15 − Not the Mama instantly winces at this, right about the same time as everyone’s favorite teacher,

Miss Why-aren’t-you-paying-attention-to-my-ironic-T-shirt,

pops out of a sky filled with irregular sized suspenders and stories about someone’s relatives

that amazingly have no relevance to any person, living or dead.

I’m pretty sure she said something to distract dr.

J long enough to give Not the Mama the opportunity to turn back to me,

like a dad threatening his children into “bein hayve “

while he tries to convince his first date since his wife left him that he’s a great dad.

Is this some s__t tier creative writing exercise?

They focused on professional boundaries and personal autonomy.

Serenity_B − Sounds like you have a great professional reference in Docter J,

hopefully you can leverage it into a job that pays as well as 2 jobs.

dajur1 − Just the nerve to tell you what you can't do on your own time. Sheesh.

These commenters critiqued the teacher’s writing style rather than the situation

Ciderglove − You want specifics about your writing. OK.

This is full of spelling mistakes, bad grammar and missing words.

For example, in the fourth paragraph you are missing an 'a' before 'second job'.

In the first paragraph, the semicolon before 'a rarity' should be a colon.

There are many, many such problems.

That is quite mundane stuff, but it does make a difference;

it just greatly increases the friction/difficulty of parsing your writing, and strains the reader's patience.

More distinctively, you frequently leap from one idea to a very different one,

or introduce an entirely new idea mid-sentence, without any warning.

Look at the first sentence of your fifth paragraph, for example.

It is very jarring and clumsy for you to introduce that female teacher in the way that you do.

The way you did it would be more appropriate as a joke about an established character,

not as a way to introduce them.

As it stands, I had to re-read that first sentence about four times

before I understood that an entirely new character had appeared

and had started telling irrelevant anecdotes to the departing principal.

Also, it comes across as childish and spiteful,

which does not endear you to me in a story in which you are supposed to be the winsome hero.

In general, your style of writing, and presumably your style of thought,

is scattershot, casual, and oddly evasive in a curt, sardonic way.

It feels like it would cause you pain to tell a story briefly, coherently

and without spilling over into your pet hates (such as of colleagues who wear suspenders).

Chewbacca319 − For the sake of your former students I hope you weren't an english teacher; this was hard to read..

I don't know if you were trying to be funny or what but your sentence structure

and scatterbrained post gave me a headache.

Good job I guess sticking it to the man though?

chabs1965 − Ok since you asked for constructive criticism on your writing style...

Be careful when using pop culture references.

Yes many of us are from the 90s and we still didn't understand the reference.

Use them carefully and put in a short explanation otherwise some will feel deliberately cut out.

But also make up your mind regarding references.

You assume that IYKYK (if you know you know) about the 90s

but then explain voila as if that's not a very common word.

In one paragraph you're assuming we know then in the next you're assuming we're stupid.

Several people asked for help understanding the story as a whole.

When your target audience can't follow the thread, then the logic and continuity of the story isn't well written.

I get it you are (or think you are) the cool teacher. I remember mine very well.

Somehow he made government easy to understand and interesting.

But there's cool and there's cringe. I hope you can see that difference.

All that to say, I'm sorry the new boss was such a jerk. He didn't need to be and clearly doesn't know how to manage people.

Good luck on following the Doctor.

This story struck a nerve because it reflects a quiet truth: educators are asked to give endlessly, then judged for surviving creatively. The teacher didn’t rage, protest, or beg; he complied. Literally, and in doing so, he exposed just how fragile bad leadership can be.

Was leaving the only reasonable option once respect was lost, or should he have fought from within? And if a single comment can send a ripple through an entire school, what does that say about the system holding it together? Share your thoughts below, we’re listening.

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

Related Posts

Woman Cuts Parents Off Financially After Discovering They Secretly Gave Her Money To Deadbeat Golden Child Brother
Social Issues

Woman Cuts Parents Off Financially After Discovering They Secretly Gave Her Money To Deadbeat Golden Child Brother

1 month ago
Sister Debates Skipping Brother’s Wedding After He Ditched Her Own For Vacation
Social Issues

Sister Debates Skipping Brother’s Wedding After He Ditched Her Own For Vacation

1 month ago
DIL Demands Free Housing Forever After Telling Husband to Move Out
Social Issues

DIL Demands Free Housing Forever After Telling Husband to Move Out

3 months ago
MIL Tried To Snoop In DIL’s Bedroom, So DIL Used Glitter To Catch Her Trying To Snoop
Social Issues

MIL Tried To Snoop In DIL’s Bedroom, So DIL Used Glitter To Catch Her Trying To Snoop

2 months ago
Bride’s Midnight Confession Exposes Fiancé’s Cruel Revenge Plot Hidden In Wedding Guest’s Necklace For Years
Social Issues

Bride’s Midnight Confession Exposes Fiancé’s Cruel Revenge Plot Hidden In Wedding Guest’s Necklace For Years

2 months ago
Western Friends Think This Indian Woman Is ‘Brainwashed,’ But Her Marriage Story Proves Otherwise
Social Issues

Western Friends Think This Indian Woman Is ‘Brainwashed,’ But Her Marriage Story Proves Otherwise

2 months ago

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POST

Email me new posts

Email me new comments

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

TRENDING

Airline Manager Refuses To Pay Employee An Extra $1.75 An Hour, Ends Up Costing Thousands In Delays
Social Issues

Airline Manager Refuses To Pay Employee An Extra $1.75 An Hour, Ends Up Costing Thousands In Delays

by Leona Pham
November 11, 2025
0

...

Read more
Sunny Hostin & Ana Navarro Share Their Anxieties And Consequences Of A False Positive Covid-19 Test That Got Them Dismissed From ‘The View’
News

Sunny Hostin & Ana Navarro Share Their Anxieties And Consequences Of A False Positive Covid-19 Test That Got Them Dismissed From ‘The View’

by Anna Martinez
April 17, 2024
0

...

Read more
Vegan Couple Refuses To Pay $120 For “Family Style” Dinner After Only Eating Bread
Social Issues

Vegan Couple Refuses To Pay $120 For “Family Style” Dinner After Only Eating Bread

by Annie Nguyen
September 16, 2025
0

...

Read more
Controlling Husband Demanded She Quit Her Job, Her Literal Response Was Priceless
Social Issues

Controlling Husband Demanded She Quit Her Job, Her Literal Response Was Priceless

by Annie Nguyen
October 31, 2025
0

...

Read more
Student Hits Breaking Point After School Ignores His Bullied Years
Social Issues

Student Hits Breaking Point After School Ignores His Bullied Years

by Sunny Nguyen
November 21, 2025
0

...

Read more




Daily Highlight

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

Navigate Site

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Policy
  • ADVERTISING POLICY
  • Corrections Policy
  • SYNDICATION
  • Editorial Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Sitemap

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM