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Boss Told New Dad He’d Never Find A Better Job, So He Found One With More Pay, More Time Off, And Quit

by Annie Nguyen
November 7, 2025
in Social Issues

Some bosses treat approved time off like a suggestion they can ignore the moment things get busy. They overbook jobs, cut corners, and act surprised when employees finally disappear for good.

In tiny companies where replacing skilled workers is nearly impossible, gambling with paternity leave is the fastest way to lose the one person keeping everything afloat.

After six years of fourteen-hour days and canceled vacations, the original poster warned his boss that the five weeks after his son’s birth would be completely off-limits. The boss nodded, then blew up OP’s phone the very next morning with an “emergency.”

What started as a screaming match ended with a challenge no one expected OP to meet. Keep scrolling for the single sheet of paper that made a terrible employer eat every word.

A new father returned from paternity leave to hand his corner-cutting boss a job offer that ended six years of overwork in one sheet of paper

Boss Told New Dad He’d Never Find A Better Job, So He Found One With More Pay, More Time Off, And Quit
Not the actual photo

Boss is going to keep asking me to work shifts when I take time off? How about I take a permanent vacation?

I work in the northeast US and my employer at the time was a very small company

(Boss and 5 employees) in a very specific industry where 90% of our work was on

construction sites and finding a well-qualified person

in this very specific industry is a very very hard thing to do.

My boss was the kind of boss that every employee hates. Corners were cut every

possible way in order to keep overhead costs down. On top of that he would

constantly overbook on jobs (like signing contracts for 6 projects

during the same week knowing full well that he only has 5 employees) which would result in

the employees often working 14 hour days or more

which really sucks when you're on salary (no overtime).

His worst attribute by far was approving time off and then during your time off calling

or texting you asking if you would be willing to work a day or cut your vacation short.

Sometimes he'd even ask you to move your time off

to the next week or next month "when the workload lightens up"

(hint: it never lightened up due to his constant overbooking).

After working at this company for 6 years I got used to all the aforementioned annoyances.

But then things changed, my son was born.

In the months leading up to his birth I made it very clear that I would be

taking a 5-week unpaid leave of absence once he arrives. The state we're in

allows new parents to take up to 8 weeks of unpaid leave. I told my boss that

I know 8 weeks would be a huge strain on such a small company so I was willing

to take 5 weeks but those 5 weeks would be completely "off the grid" meaning

don't call me, don't text me, if you're going to ask me to do anything

work-related the answer will be no so don't bother.

I'm going to be spending time with my family. He 100% agreed.

Fast-forward to my son's birth. He was born on a Friday and after a short stay

in the NICU (don't worry, he's fine) was released on Monday and we took him home.

Tuesday morning (yeah...the next day) I wake up to a missed call, an email, and

3 texts all from my boss asking me to call him back ASAP. For reasons still

unknown to me to this day I call him back and he tells me there's a slight

emergency (code speak for he screwed up the scheduling and has a job with no

employee at it) and asks if I could maybe come into work that day and maybe

work a couple more days that week until he finds someone to cover it.

I lost it. I literally felt something in my neck snap and unleashed a verbal

a__ault on him that I still feel bad about now, a year later. I ended my rant

with an apology...as much of a d__k move it was for him to be calling me in

that situation it was still completely unprofessional of me to say what I said to him.

Obviously he wasn't a big fan of what I said and after a small rant of his own

ended with the sentences that made this whole story possible.

He said, "You've got a pretty good gig at this company that most people your

age would be thankful for. I'd be impressed if you could find a better job in

this field because I've been doing this for 30 years and I know how small this

industry is and trust me, good jobs like yours don't come along very often.

Think about that." So we ended the call and I did what he said. I thought about it. After thinking

about it for about 30 seconds I got out of bed, sat down in front of my

computer and started looking at job postings.

5 weeks later my time off came to an end and my first day back I came in to

work, walked into my boss's office and handed him a piece of paper.

Boss: "What's this?" Me: "I thought about what you said about how you'd be really impressed

if I could find a better job than the one I have here. ...so I did."

My boss reads over what I handed him...a job offer from a competitor for the

exact same job I was performing but at a 25% higher salary, an extra week of

paid vacation compared to what I had AND a stipulation that company policy was

that work hours are capped at 8 per day meaning

that once I hit 8 hours on a job I pack up and leave it until tomorrow. No exceptions.

Boss: "Well then...ummm...can I have the day to crunch some numbers to come up with a counter-offer?"

Me: "No, don't bother. I just wanted you to see it because I know you wouldn't have believed me otherwise."

Gave my two week notice and left for whatever job site I was on that day.

That was a year ago and I could not be happier with my new job.

I get to spend lots of time with my boy and that's the best job perk there is.

For all you bosses and managers out there. Don't f__k with your employees...

especially the good ones. Treat them how you'd want to be treated.

Most employees don't quit their jobs....they quit their bosses!

There’s a moment in life when a person realizes that protecting their peace, and their family, matters more than protecting someone else’s convenience.

Whether you’re a brand-new parent or just someone trying to enjoy a weekend, most of us have felt that tension between meeting expectations at work and maintaining our humanity outside of it.

In this situation, the emotions sit deeper than a simple work request. The employee wasn’t just declining a shift, he was defending a boundary tied to one of the most vulnerable and significant moments of his life: becoming a parent.

When someone is already stretched thin and emotionally raw, even a seemingly routine request can land like a betrayal, especially after clear agreements were made. His reaction wasn’t simply anger; it was the culmination of years of overextension and finally choosing self-preservation.

On the other side, the employer’s perspective likely came from panic, pressure, and fear of losing control in an understaffed business. In very small companies, bosses often blur lines between “urgency” and “entitlement.”

Psychologist Dr. Adam Grant notes that burnout often stems not from effort, but from a chronic mismatch between values and demands.

Meanwhile, Psychology Today emphasizes that boundary violations trigger strong emotional responses because boundaries protect our core needs, belonging, rest, identity, and respect. When someone repeatedly pushes beyond those lines, quitting becomes less of a decision and more of a release.

But urgency doesn’t erase agreed-upon boundaries, and entitlement doesn’t magically create loyalty. Work culture researchers frequently remind us that burnout doesn’t happen overnight; it builds in silence.

And when someone reaches that emotional threshold, often triggered by a personal life event like a newborn, clarity hits fast: What am I sacrificing, and who benefits? The employee chose identity over obligation. And that’s powerful.

It also highlights how fragile professional loyalty is when not reciprocated. People don’t abandon hard jobs; they abandon environments that make them feel replaceable, undervalued, or disrespected. The irony is that the boss believed the employee couldn’t find better, a belief rooted not in reality but in ego and control.

Modern work-life balance isn’t laziness; it’s a sign that people have learned their worth outside a paycheck. And when they walk away, it isn’t impulsive, it’s self-respect.

So it leaves us with a question worth reflecting on: When someone repeatedly crosses your boundaries, how long do you stay loyal before choosing yourself, and the people waiting for you at home?

Here’s what Redditors had to say:

These Redditors crowned the “employees quit bosses” mantra and toasted the escape

blackjesushiphop − My company has a line in my contract that if anyone calls me and asks me to work

on a scheduled day off I am to be paid for 8 hours that day and I keep my day off. I assume to curb s__t like this.

radioaktvt − Most employees don't quit their jobs. ...they quit their bosses! So true. Congrats on your son and the better job!

alphalegend91 − I f__king love this. As a small business owner I can't understand why a boss would treat

their employee like s__t and expect them to stick around.

Your boss sounds like a nightmare and I'm so happy you left for greener pastures.

Shared glow-up stories of bosses who honored leave—or lost everyone when they didn’t

alankel − Congratulations on the new job! I was in a similar situation a few years ago after my

daughter was born but my boss went the opposite way to your old one. Mine was full of apologies,

I got an extra couple of days of paid holidays and took my wife out for a nice dinner

in a restaurant on the company's expense account. There were a couple of things over the years that I've been

annoyed with but overall the place I'm with now are pretty decent.

bloody_bone − Finally a story i can completely relate to. My baby girl was born last year and boss

tried to make me work during my paternity leave (paid by government) when i pointed it out,

he apologized in such bad way i just started looking elsewhere. It has been a month i switched and

I've never felt happier, healthier and closer to my beautiful baby girl. I was the third in 2 weeks

who quit and because i kept in touch with former coworkers, I've learned another one will be handing

his 2 weeks notice after the vacation and another one might join me in a different department.

So in other words, in a business with 4 employees, they will now be 3 and soon 2 tech

to deals with a work load of 15 techs. No more my circus, no more my monkeys.

Previous company HR may finally realized that i wasn't exaggerating when i said he's unfit to be a supervisor

with his passive-aggressive attitude and moodiness.

belbites − This is one of the reasons I'm so thankful for the company I work for.

We're also very tiny, three people in the office, two out (though the two out are owners).

Recently we had our fourth team member quit, and it's not in the budget to get a new one

quite yet (bs a bit, but dudes got multiple companies and were the only one really turning a profit)

and were also open 6 days a week. They want 3 people there, but can really only manage two

except on busy days where we need three. In August I'll be taking two weeks off and in September

both my manager and I will be taking 4 day weekends to deal with various stuff we've had

planned for almost a year (I've got a festival and my manager has a wedding).

I asked my manager today how our other coworker is going to handle time without us.

She skyped the owner and was like "hey so when (other coworker quit) you said you'd come in during

the times we needed off. So we need you to come in and do customer service, tickets, phone calls,

and theres a few other days we may need time off so here's a list" and laid it all out for him.

He said hell come in just to remind him beforehand. This wasn't very malicious compliance, but I am so

thankful the fact that she put her foot down when she knew we had previously had plans for vacations

and stuff that she wasn't gonna let the fact that he wouldnt let us hire someone else come in

the way or let the company suffer. She stood up for the three of us, got me and my coworker raises,

and made sure that the owner (a workaholic) knew that he was gonna have to pick up some

of the slack in the office doing our job (which he hasn't done in 5 years),

maybe he might also rethink having us have such low salaries. I b__ch about my job a lot,

but for the same reason that people quit s__tty managers I will likely hold out with mine for as

long as possible. She's a great person who knows how to stand up for people.

I hope that if I ever get her job I'll be half as competent as she is. Wow that got long, sorry.

Reminded small-industry bosses that skilled workers aren’t trapped

slightlyassholic − Yeah, people in charge sometimes forget that skilled employees, especially in a niche field, are often very

hard to find or replace and if they are shorthanded odds are that several other prospective employers are

as well and will be all too happy to hire away someone from them.

89SuperJ − Fine I'll do it. TL,DR: Boss keeps asking OP to work on days he requested off.

Op finally loses it, verbally shits on boss. Boss says be more appreciative, it would be hard for you

to find a better gig. OP says YOLO, flips double birds, and finds better gig. Old boss cries.

Saluted the classy two-week notice after years of nonsense

Aykay24 − You still gave two weeks notice, you're a classy man.

Trappleberryfinn − Very true. I worked in a truck shop with 1 other mechanic and a service manager.

My wife works and we split the kids time off if they need to go to the doctors etc.

There is a big shortage for skilled diesel technicians at the moment which adds some spice to the story

because he was looking for months to find another mechanic for first shift. So one day after I had to

take the day off because my daughter had an ear infection he says "you really don't give a f__k

about this job huh?" Mind you, he is a baby boomer who's wife stays at home.

So him and I get into this massive argument. I hate confrontation as well but this guy loved it.

The next few days I combed for jobs and found one for better pay and less hours.

The day after I received a job offer I brought my truck and loaded up my toolbox.

All of a sudden he starts telling me how maybe we can be more flexible with time off.

Life is too short to put up with b__lshit. But before you leave make sure you have a backup.

Called out the classic “you’ll never do better” bluff

erobbslittlebrother − I love when s__tty bosses pull the "Its not better anywhere else/this is ACTUALLY a really good job" b__lshit. They're always full of s__t

FifthRendition − I once heard someone here on Reddit say, "Money comes and goes, health just goes."

Recounted making a tyrant boss beg, store closed two months later

Sadness_Is_Life − Reminds me of when I was a manager at this small town Mom & Pa type grocery store

when I was 20-22, Store owner treated people like f__king s__t, Refused to give breaks,

Would call you in on days you had off, would refuse to give you days off for serious s__t,

Witnessed a co-worker one time get denied the weekend off when her mom died, Boss just said sorry but no,

Your work is more important (spoiler, She quit) But for 3 weeks once, he had my scheduled from 4:30am -1pm

EVERY day, (We didnt even open till 8am) I was denied my 15 minute breaks,

He didnt schedule ANYONE else to work with me for those 9 hours, this went on for 3 weeks almost,

I complained to him and he just laughed and said "Sucks huh? But Im not changing it, Get back to work,

I know you cant find anything better to do than work here" So I quit.

..I was managing 3 full departments, Bakery, Deli and taking care of the backroom shipping,

Which NOBODY else in the store knew how to do, Within 2 months of me quitting the store was

doing so badly they had to close down, Old boss was calling my cell 3-4x a day BEGGING me

to come back. One of my fondest memories of my 20's

Countdown to quitting & PTO-burn flex

[Reddit User] − I'm counting down my days right now. I have a pretty sweet gig, but I'm massively underpaid

relative to my colleagues in the same role, purely because I was hired on as a tech and worked

my way up to a project manager. Couple that with no raises since last March of 2018,

and no raise in sight until "end of year" from what we've heard (pending profitability, hah).

My current employer fired my former boss over a year ago. He reached out to me after his non-compete

expired and offered me a position with his new employer starting in September for 20k more than I'm

making now. I'm burning all my PTO, and even dates I had marked off later in the year

I'm moving to use them now rather than later - I lucked out and work asked me to travel

for a job in two weeks, right when some of my PTO was planned and approved already.

I agreed, reentered all my PTO so I'm burning it all before September now under the guise of

"I'm not booked on projects and the ones I'm on should be slow" and they're cool with it.

The amount of shocked Pikachu memes that will be given when I tender my resignation to my director,

sales lead and sales VP is going to be priceless. All, if you have an employee billing clients at

$170 an hour, 25-40 hours a week consistently, pay them more than $65k a year.

One clueless boss thought a new dad was irreplaceable on his terms; turns out the dad was irreplaceable everywhere else, complete with 25% more cash and actual evenings with his son.

Moral of the story: never dare a sleep-deprived parent to job-hunt; they’ll do it one-handed while the baby naps on their chest.

So tell me, would you have handed over that offer letter with a smile, or made him sweat a full week? Spill your own “I quit my boss” triumphs below; my coffee’s ready!

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!

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