Working from home sounds like a dream until you’ve spent your Friday night trapped on a call that should have ended an hour ago.
For one 22-year-old woman working in the finance sector, remote work came with a challenge she hadn’t fully anticipated: customers who seemed determined to keep her on the phone forever. Her job revolves around taking calls, and while most interactions are manageable, some customers can stretch a conversation from a few minutes into multiple hours.
The problem is that overtime isn’t optional. If a customer is still on the line when her shift ends, she has to stay until the issue is resolved.
One particularly frustrating evening led her to discover a loophole that seemed harmless at first. But after using it repeatedly, she found herself questioning whether she’d accidentally become the kind of employee she never wanted to be.

Here’s what happened.










A Friday Night Discovery
A few weeks into working remotely, she found herself stuck on a call 45 minutes after her scheduled finish time.
It was Friday. Her friends were already making plans, and she had been looking forward to unwinding all week.
Unfortunately, the customer she was speaking with had a long list of issues that still needed to be addressed.
Then she remembered something that had happened earlier that day.
A different customer had abruptly ended a call after receiving another incoming call.
That memory sparked an idea.
Because of how the company’s software worked, she could see the customer’s phone number on her screen.
Curiosity mixed with impatience. Before she could talk herself out of it, she grabbed her personal phone, blocked her caller ID, and dialed the customer’s number.
A moment later, the customer interrupted the conversation.
“Oh, I’m getting another call. I’ve got to go.”
The customer hung up.
The problem disappeared.
And so did she.
The Loophole Becomes a Habit
At first, she viewed the incident as a one-time thing.
A harmless shortcut after an exhausting week.
But once she knew it worked, the temptation became harder to resist.
Whenever a customer became especially rude, dismissive, or unnecessarily demanding, she found herself reaching for her phone.
Sometimes it happened when a caller talked in circles for far too long. Other times it was after enduring a stream of insults or condescending remarks.
The process was always the same.
Dial.
Wait.
Customer notices another incoming call.
Customer leaves.
Problem solved.
What surprised her most wasn’t that it worked.
It was how often it worked.
Apparently, many people can’t resist checking another call, even when they’re already speaking with customer service.
Why Small Shortcuts Become Big Temptations
It’s easy to laugh at the situation because, on the surface, it’s relatively harmless.
Nobody loses money.
Nobody gets scammed.
The customer can simply call back later.
But workplace psychologists often point out that seemingly minor shortcuts can become attractive when employees feel exhausted, overworked, or powerless.
According to workplace experts at Psychology Today, burnout often pushes employees toward “withdrawal behaviors,” small actions that create distance from stressors when they feel they have little control over their workload. These behaviors can range from procrastination to finding creative ways to avoid unpleasant tasks.
Source: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/basics/burnout
In this case, the issue may not be laziness at all.
It may simply be someone trying to regain a sense of control after spending hours handling difficult situations with demanding customers.
The loophole became less about escaping work and more about escaping frustration.
That doesn’t necessarily make it right.
But it does help explain why it felt so satisfying.
The Ethical Gray Area
What makes this confession interesting is that even the person doing it seems conflicted.
If she genuinely believed it was completely acceptable, she wouldn’t be posting about it anonymously.
Part of her clearly recognizes that she’s manipulating the situation.
At the same time, she also knows that many of the calls she’s ending involve people who are rude, disrespectful, or taking advantage of the fact that someone on the other end is required to remain professional no matter what.
That’s where the moral gray area appears.
Most people have fantasized about hanging up on a difficult customer at some point.
She simply found a creative way to make the customer hang up first.
These are the responses from Reddit users:
Many Redditors found the confession more funny than shocking.




Several people admitted they were surprised anyone would answer an unknown number while already speaking with customer service. Others joked that compared to some workplace confessions, this one felt incredibly tame.




A few commenters even applauded the creativity, arguing that rude customers don’t deserve unlimited access to someone else’s time and patience.













Most workplace shortcuts exist because somebody eventually discovers a gap between the rules and reality.
This employee happened to find hers while staring at the clock on a Friday evening.
The real question isn’t whether the trick works.
Clearly, it does.
The more interesting question is why she felt compelled to use it in the first place.
When employees are exhausted, frustrated, and stuck dealing with rude people long after their shifts are supposed to end, even a tiny loophole can start to feel irresistible.
So was this harmless ingenuity, or just a clever way of dodging responsibility?
That depends on whether you sympathize more with the tired employee or the customer who suddenly got an unexpected phone call.

















