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English Teacher Outsmarts Moscow School Admin After They Try To Trap Him Twice With Their Own Policy

by Layla Bui
November 9, 2025
in Social Issues

Working abroad sounds romantic until your employer turns out to be a bureaucracy machine powered by double standards and bad communication. That’s what happened to one English teacher in Moscow, who shared his story on Reddit’s r/MaliciousCompliance.

After being denied vacation that another teacher easily got, he still played by the rules until management tried to twist those same rules against him. What followed was a masterclass in calm, calculated compliance.

He didn’t yell, didn’t quit, didn’t even break a policy. He just followed their rules to the letter. And every time they tried to punish him, those same rules snapped back like a boomerang.

A Moscow English teacher, denied vacation and ghosted at a cover class, weaponizes the school’s own rules twice

English Teacher Outsmarts Moscow School Admin After They Try To Trap Him Twice With Their Own Policy
not the actual photo

'They're your rules?'

I was an English teacher in Moscow.

At the beginning of the school year, I asked for a week of time off around a holiday, so I could travel some.

I got denied so the week it came around, I was pleased that most of my classes had been canceled

because the students had the same idea I had and were all going on vacation.

I get an email from the administration stating that I was to cover classes for another teacher.

Who was taking vacation for the week I had asked for.

So I was already a bit upset about that they'd approved him, but not me - especially since I'd asked for it like 5 months ago.

Anyway, I accept the hand that was dealt and start preparing lessons.

The day of the first class, I leave home a few hours early so that I had plenty of time to make sure I could find the place

(it was at a location I'd never been) and that I had all the necessary equipment I needed to read the lessons.

It was pretty easy to find, but when I rang the bell, there was no answer.

I had some time, so I went off to get a snack. I come back to the school about 30 minutes early and ring the bell again.

No answer. I try calling the school's administrator. No answer. I try calling the administrator who assigned the classes. No answer.

For over an hour I rang the doorbell and called multiple times to no avail.

My contract stated that I had to wait 30 minutes for students to show up before I could leave.

So at the 30 minute mark, I sent a text to all parties that read something along the lines of: I was here on time.

I waited a half hour after the scheduled time, but nobody answered the door. I'm going back home.

It will take me 20 minutes to get to the metro. If you call me before I board, I will turn around and come back.

When I got home, I got a call: "Where the hell are you?" "At home." "You have a class."

"I'm aware. I was there and nobody answered the door. I called and nobody answered. I also left a text."

"Texting is not an approved form of communication."

Now, this was before I had a phone with a data plan, so text was the only way I could message someone.

They tried docking my pay for this, but when I told the owner what had happened

and showed him my call logs and the text I left, he made sure that didn't happen.

Fast forward a few months. I'd been having a lot of issues with the administration

so I'd become an expert on the finer details of our contract.

One of those details was that the administration couldn't assign a class with less than 72 hours notice.

So when they called on Saturday, to give me a class for Monday, I told them no.

Again, they tried to dock my pay. The owner sighed at me and told me I was right.

My favorite part, though, was receiving a text that said I was to teach a class on a given day.

They made special mention of the 72 hour rule. I ignored the text.

When the time for class came around, I got another call: "Where the hell are you?" "At home." "You have a class."

"No I don't." "I sent you a text. I have it saved." "Texting is not an approved form of communication."

We’ve all had those moments when bureaucracy tries to outsmart common sense and fails spectacularly. For this English teacher in Moscow, following the rules to the letter became the perfect revenge against an administration that cared more about technicalities than people.

It started when the school denied a simple vacation request, only to assign the teacher extra work covering for someone whose leave had been approved.

Then came the fiasco of an empty classroom, students missing, administrators unreachable, and a policy stating that teachers must wait 30 minutes before leaving. He did exactly that, sent a polite text explaining the situation, and went home.

When accused later of misconduct, the admin smugly told him, “Texting is not an approved form of communication.” It was the kind of Kafkaesque logic only an overzealous bureaucracy could love.

As workplace expert Dr. Robert Sutton, author of The No Asshole Rule, explains, “Organizations that weaponize rules over reason foster disengagement and quiet rebellion.”

Employees stop trying to fix problems; they start following the rulebook so rigidly that the absurdity exposes itself. And that’s exactly what happened here.

Months later, when the administration tried assigning a class without the required 72-hour notice, he declined. They tried docking his pay again but this time, he quoted the contract word for word.

When they later sent him a text assigning another class, he ignored it. Cue déjà vu: “Where are you?” they demanded. His reply? “Texting isn’t an approved form of communication.”

According to organizational psychologist Adam Grant, this kind of “strategic compliance” is a common response to unfair authority. “When systems are rigid, intelligent noncompliance becomes the only rational behavior,” he wrote in Harvard Business Review.

The teacher didn’t break the rules; he used them as a mirror, showing the system how ridiculous it had become.

In the end, no yelling, no drama, just precision, patience, and poetic irony. Sometimes the smartest way to win against bureaucracy is to let its own rules trip over themselves.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These Redditors cheered the OP for their confidence and clever comeback, finding the story empowering, funny, and deeply satisfying to read

MeloncholyTardigrade − "Have you had enough Bully Boy or do you want some more?"

Quoting, probably poorly, The Young Ones c. '82.

gerrard114 − You know the rules... And so do I....

This group discussed how ridiculous and toxic workplaces can be when they invent arbitrary “approved communication” rules

3Swiftly − “Texting is not an approved form of communication” - good thing it’s not 2020

when we can speak to/see each other through a magic window across the world through the internet.

Toxic. Toxic supervision. Unless that is in the contract, they pulled that out of their nose

to try to get one over on you when they didn’t respond to your comms.

ElectroNeutrino − Ohh, this reminds me of when I worked retail a long time ago.

I was on a share phone plan with an ex (we were good friends at the time

but now don't talk for reasons that will become apparent), who's then-new partner pressured them to boot me off.

They removed me without letting me know, and I found out when I couldn't make calls or texts anymore

and asked them over social media IM to look into it.

I was due into work the next morning, but woke up with a severe infection that nearly hospitalized me, complete with 104F fever.

I couldn't call or text my supervisor, since I didn't have a working phone anymore,

so I did the best thing I could; I sent my coworker an IM letting them know that I was really sick

and headed to the doctor, and would be out at least the rest of the week.

When I came back in with my doctors note the next week, they tried to fire me for no-call, no-show,

and then admitted that they got my message from the coworker, but said it wasn't an "approved form of communication."

I pointed out that they just admitted they knew where I was, and was trying to fire me for being sick.

They stopped, realized what they were about to do, and then backtracked.

iamthenightrn − We have mandatory call shifts at my job, it's how they skirt passed "mandatory overtime,"

which is illegal in this state for nurses.

So instead of mandatory overtime, they call it Mandatory call because overtime is guaranteed, call is not.

They tried to "call" me in via Facebook messenger one day. Naturally, I didn't come in,

because I rarely use Facebook, let alone Facebook messenger.

They got pissy with me, and I was like, first of all I'm on mandatory call, not mandatory text.

Second of all, if you're going to text me, TEXT ME, why you think Facebook messenger is acceptable is beyond me.

In the end, they got in trouble, not me, because there's no rule that I have to respond to Facebook about my job,

especially, when I don't have anyone I work with, on my Facebook.

They had to take the time to search me out and message me, instead of using my phone number, written in a book.

These commenters shared their own frustrating experiences with exploitative or manipulative employers

kaydyee − I worked as an English teacher in Moscow.

Because I really needed my job, I would do much more than my contract stipulated to please my boss

and ensure my position was secure. I once got called into the office to discuss my tardiness.

School started at 9am,and I was consistently arriving five to ten minutes late one week

(due to very bad traffic on the roads in the winter).

When I was called into the office, my boss tried to use my pay as leverage.

She asked me, “This is a simple matter—are you following the contract or not?” I boldly replied, “No. I do not.

I was hired for one class, but I teach two because you have not hired a second teacher.

I take half-hour lunches when it states I can take an hour break.

Additionally, there is no head teacher and I have been meeting with parents on MY time without complaint.”

She didn’t say a word after that.

shaggyscoob − That is so infuriating when employers claim all the privileges and deny any responsibilities.

My son was a CNA for a nursing home. The schedule was posted in the office

and it changed a lot due to plenty of unreliable employees.

My son would request to not be scheduled for a particular day

and it was hit or miss whether that request would be honored.

So he always checked the schedule and abided by it when it came out.

Lo and behold, one of the times he had requested to not be scheduled was actually honored

and so he made the plans to live his life that day but made sure to check the schedule

one last time before he left work the day before his day off.

The next morning his phone lit up with messages demanding to know where he was and why wasn't he at work.

By the time he got these messages he was far away doing a family event

and he responded to them saying he wasn't scheduled as of the night before.

Boss said the written and posted schedule wasn't official and employees must check the official online

schedule for the real deal. Apparently, employees must check the online schedule daily

to see whether it had been changed to indicate they did, indeed, have to show up for work that day

even though they may not know it until just hours before the shift is to begin.

My son even got written up for failing to show and had other employees mad at him for stiffing them on staffing.

Absolute b__lshit. My son is a responsible and caring person and has a serious case of self-doubt.

He felt terrible, he felt he had let down his employer, his co-workers and his patients.

He is not the kind of person to advocate for himself. But he was also college aged

and so I had to use all my strength to resist the urge to go in and ream their asses on his behalf.

Fortunately he left that place in the fall when he had to head back to school.

BTW, healthcare industry ought to get as much flak as the health insurance industry.

Nursing homes charge residents like $8,000 a month for room, board

and the most basic level of care and pay the employees s__t wages.

Somebody is making bank on this racket and it ain't the skeleton crew of CNAs, cooks,

maintenance workers and a smattering of RNs.

This user injected humor and surprise

binkerton_ − Surprised you f__k around with Russian authority like that.

JakDaLad01 − Oh man, they must've hated you

bigjessicakes − You are my hero!

surebegrandlike − I can just imagine the shocked pikachiu face from the caller

CJsopinion − Omg. I love the last sentence. Perfect wrap up. lol

Was the 72-hour ghost too cold, or just compliance? Ever turn a rulebook into revenge? Grade your gripes below!

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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