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

Pregnant Worker Forced to Lift Heavy Cylinder by Supervisor – He Regrets It After HR Steps In

by Charles Butler
October 29, 2025
in Social Issues

Imagine showing up to work 31 weeks pregnant, ready to handle your day at a water filtration plant – not a strongman contest – when your power-tripping supervisor tosses a 45-pound nitrogen cylinder in your path. “No light duty papers? Then lift it!” he says, as if your baby bump were just a fashion accessory.

Our Redditor – let’s call her the Filtration Queen – tried reasoning with him. She explained she was expecting, but “rules-are-rules Randy” wasn’t hearing it. So, she did what so many pregnant workers have to do: powered through. Unfortunately, her body reminded her that she’s not built for Olympic weightlifting right now.

One wrong lift later – ouch. Pulled muscle, quick nurse visit, and a very awkward incident report. Thankfully, mom and baby were okay. Randy’s ego, though? About to take a massive hit.

Pregnant Worker Forced to Lift Heavy Cylinder by Supervisor - He Regrets It After HR Steps In
Not the actual photo

Want the juicy details? Dive into the original story below!

"If a pregnant woman doesn't have light duty paperwork, she should be capable of doing the job as required without help"?

I broke this scenario down over in AITA, and was told to bring it over here cause it would fit in just swimmingly.

I am currently 31 weeks pregnant and I work as a water filtration operator.

Every four weeks, me and the other operators rotate onto the maintenance shift where we work under this particular supervisor, we'll call him Randy.

Randy likes to think he has more control that he does have, and honestly, the plant supervisor just lets him think that.

About a month or so ago, I was working with him and he told me to pick up a 45 lb empty nitrogen cylinder.

I politely reminded him that I was pregnant and shouldn't be doing that, to which he responded since I didn't have light duty paperwork, it shouldn't be a problem.

I sucked it up and lifted the cylinder and carried it to the destination, but received a pulled muscle in the process.

The next day, I informed the plant supervisor and an work injury report was filed.

When my statement was taken, the verbiage I used that was corroborated with another coworker that was present caused Randy to get in trouble

because he knew I was pregnant and essentially caused the injury to happen.

They took me to a nurse to make sure that my baby was fine and that I was okay and was not experiencing any complications from the injury.

I wasn't other than being in pain if I moved too much. They sent me back on my way and the plant supervisor put me on desk duty for the...

Randy was livid of course because he lost some of his manpower on the maintenance team.

He made a fuss about me not having light duty paperwork saying that if I didn't have it then I should be capable of doing the work that is needed...

I was capable, I just used common sense. Prior to this incident, I did my job to the fullest within the limitations of my body, which wasn't that much.

I rested when I needed to, didn't lift more than my body would allow, and most importantly,

I was the only female out of 7 employees so my other coworkers were more than willing to help me if I asked (which wasn't that often).

So the plant supervisor called me into his office and requested that I go get my light duty papers from the doctor ASAP.

That's the only way he could protect me from getting further hurt at work. I told him I understood and made the call to the drs office and picked it...

I got the paperwork that was supposed to keep Randy quiet and it restricted me as such:. No stooping more than 2 times an hour.

No climbing ladders or poles at all. No climbing more than 3 flights of stairs a shift. No lifting more than 25 pounds.

No standing more than 30 minutes out of each hour. And limited contact with chemicals

These orders of course make it very difficult for me to do my job fully as it basically limits me to either desk work, or general cleaning.

Now Is know this list is b__lshit, because I can definitely stoop more than two times in an hour.

I may be out of breath coming back up, but I can do it. And the climbing more than three flights of stairs is ridiculous because that means I can't...

Someone else has to do the last set for me because you climb a set of stairs every time.

Under normal circumstances, I would be more than happy to bend the rules here to make everyone's lives easier,

but honestly, since he's the one who bitched and moaned for me to get this paperwork, I plan to make full use of it.

So far, since I've received this paperwork, I keep a checklist of all of the things I can't do and fill it like a bingo card.

If I fill all of the things; to the office I go because that means I can't do anymore physical work on shift.

And he has a bad habit of tossing a lot of work my way in the beginning of my shifts.

When the plant manager found out what happened, he wasn’t impressed. He quickly reassigned our mom-to-be to light desk duty until she got official doctor’s orders. That’s when Randy started to lose it.

He stomped around complaining that she should still be out there grinding like everyone else. He couldn’t handle losing manpower or worse, losing control. But the manager’s message was clear: no papers, no lifting. Safety first.

So, our clever Redditor followed the rules. She went to her doctor, got official restrictions – no heavy lifting, no ladders, no repetitive bending, no climbing stairs, no standing too long – the works.

Then she returned to work, papers in hand, and turned her restrictions into a masterpiece of office-friendly revenge.

Each time a task violated her doctor’s note, she politely declined, marked it on her mental “restriction bingo card,” and checked out early when her safe work options ran dry.

Randy fumed. She smiled. The system worked – exactly the way he wanted it to.

When Bosses Forget Common Sense

You’d think most supervisors would have the basic sense not to ask a pregnant employee to lift heavy objects.

But Randy treated policy like gospel and ignored reality. In blue-collar workplaces, “tough it out” often becomes an unspoken rule – even when it’s dangerous.

What’s funny (and a little sad) is how predictable Randy’s meltdown was. Once our Redditor got reassigned, he complained nonstop that she was milking the system. But here’s the truth: she wasn’t gaming the rules.

She was following them to the letter – his letter. She just happened to do it better than him.

The result? Instant poetic justice. The same man who sneered at “light duty” ended up stuck doing the heavy lifting himself. Turns out, paperwork can be mightier than muscle.

The Bigger Picture: Pregnancy at Work Still Gets Complicated

Stories like this are more common than most people think. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) still receives more than 2,700 pregnancy-related complaints every year – many about employers who refuse reasonable accommodations like light duty. (Source: EEOC Data, 2023)

Meanwhile, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) clearly warns that pregnant workers past 20 weeks shouldn’t lift heavy weights, since it increases the risk of preterm labor and other complications. These aren’t optional guidelines – they’re health protections.

As labor attorney Michelle Lee Flores explained in an article for the Society for Human Resource Management (SHRM), “Supervisors who ignore visible pregnancy and assign dangerous tasks risk serious legal consequences. Light duty isn’t optional when medically advised.”

Translation? Randy’s little “no papers, no problem” rule wasn’t just insensitive – it could’ve landed the company in legal trouble.

Workplace Lessons with a Wink

The moral of this story is as sharp as a well-cut memo: follow the rules, but make sure they protect you – not just your boss’s pride.

For employees: always document everything, especially when safety or health is involved. If you’re pregnant, get those medical restrictions in writing and loop in HR right away.

For supervisors: lose the macho mindset. Real leadership means looking out for your team’s well-being, not daring them to break their bodies.

And for companies: train your staff properly. A simple policy misunderstanding can snowball into a viral story that makes your workplace look like a relic from the 1950s.

These are the responses from Reddit users:

Readers hailed our Filtration Queen as a “rulebook hero” and “pregnancy bingo champion.”

tylerss20 − '…this may well have been a case where chilly logic should have been replaced by the common sense of, perhaps, the average chicken.' Lord Vetinari, Making Money by...

petelka − Every European reading this wide eyed: "wait why is she not on paid leave during pregnancy?

Ooohhhh. .. It's in United States of Third World Standards"

der_innkeeper − Randy is why we can't have nice things.

Others shared their own experiences with tone-deaf bosses, proving this isn’t just one isolated case – it’s a pattern. 

[Reddit User] − Heres an abstract question. If Randy thinks he has more control than he does. But his manager let's hin think that, dosent Randy have as much control...

NightMgr − IMO, you shouldn't rely on the company nurse to determine your injury.

You need a full evaluation by your own physician and ob/gyn. And, that should be paid for by the company.

[Reddit User] − That part where you're out of breath from stooping? Your womb and its contents are compressing your abdominal aorta when you bend like that.

You're short of breath because that cuts off the circulation to the lower half of your body, including said womb and contents.

It prevents blood return, lowers you blood pressure, O2, and can make you lightheaded/pass out.

Passing out and falling down is super bad for pregnant women. It is similarly bad for businesses

where it happens due to supervisors ignoring light duty paperwork. Please don't bend excessively as defined by your profile.

SlatorFrog − Is Randy short a few apples? Who the f__k tries to make a pregnant woman do work like that?

carrierael77 − I will say that this list may be B. S. to you now at 31 weeks,

BUT in 3rd trimester things get harder day by day cause baby growth is fast. So at 31 weeks it may seem silly, but at 35 or 36 it won't....

anotherouchtoday − I had a Randy when I was pregnant. I was a soldier and assigned to a very laid back base. We were more like a college town than...

I looked like I was carrying triplets. My body made way too much fluid and I looked horrible. It was comical. But, I felt fine.

I was just huge and carrying around an extra 75 lbs but I was good. I was like you and just handled my s__t.

Until, I got called to do police call. Basically, it was my turn to help pick up trash around the base.

My sergeant told me just to report for that duty and they will reassign me for after my delivery.

This was an unwritten rule that most folks followed. Except for our Randy. No, our Randy wanted a note.

But, I didn't have one and could got get one. It would have taken about 30 minutes to get my doctor to give me a note.

Instead, he forced me to do "my duty" because "The Army doesn't see female soilders.

"So, I walked in the rain to do police call. The other folks assigned helped me and understood why I couldn't do anything.

The base commander sees me walking around , attempting to pick stuff up, and starts yelling at folks. I get picked up in a nice car and taken to HER...

Our Randy had zero clue what he was getting summoned for that morning. I'm sure he wasn't expecting to see a drowned rat looking soldier being treated like freaking royalty.

Our base no longer put ANY pregnant soldier on pick up detail. It was glorious and it was epic. And I did get pampered a bit more at my extremely...

My sergeant made Randy's life horrible. Randy had a really long two years there.

People loved that she didn’t yell or quit. She simply used logic and procedure to turn her boss’s own rulebook into her greatest defense.

EmpunktAtze − FYI, meanwhile here in Germany: Expecting mothers do not have to work during the last 6 weeks of their projected pregnancy,

but may do so as long as they formally state their intention to work during this period (paragraph 3).

New mothers are not allowed to return to work until 8 weeks have passed since the date of their child's birth (paragraph 5).

For premature, multiple and cesarean births, the return date to work is extended automatically to 12 weeks after birth (paragraph 5.1).

Oh and of course also: Women are well protected from loss of employment due to dismissal,

from the beginning of pregnancy until 4 months following childbirth (Schutzfrist) through a Kündigungsverbot, Dismissal Ban.

Only in extremely rare exceptions are employers permitted to dismiss a pregnant employee during this time.

Bingo Wins, Ego Loses

At the end of the day, one 45-pound cylinder became the spark for a perfect revenge story. Randy’s stubbornness birthed a compliance legend. The pregnant worker stayed safe, kept her dignity, and got the last laugh – all without breaking a single rule.

So, what do you think – was her “restriction bingo” the ultimate petty genius move, or just good old-fashioned justice served cold? Would you have played along like her, or lawyered up right away?

Either way, the message is clear: when bosses act like they know better than your doctor, sometimes the sweetest victory is watching them carry the load – literally.

Charles Butler

Charles Butler

Hey there, fellow spotlight seekers! As the PIC of our social issues beat—and a guy who's dived headfirst into journalism and media studies—I'm obsessed with unpacking how we chase thrills, swap stories, and tangle with the big, messy debates of inequality, justice, and resilience, whether on screens or over drinks in a dive bar. Life's an endless, twisty reel, so I love spotlighting its rawest edges in words. Growing up on early internet forums and endless news scrolls, I'm forever blending my inner fact-hoarder with the restless wanderer itching to uncover every hidden corner of the world.

Related Posts

Company Refused To Reimburse A Cheap Train Ticket Without A Receipt, Dad Makes Them Pay For A $200 Taxi Instead
Social Issues

Company Refused To Reimburse A Cheap Train Ticket Without A Receipt, Dad Makes Them Pay For A $200 Taxi Instead

4 weeks ago
This Father Refuses to Reconcile With Daughter Who Once Falsely Accused Him of Harassment
Social Issues

This Father Refuses to Reconcile With Daughter Who Once Falsely Accused Him of Harassment

3 months ago
A Healthcare Worker Suspected a Doctor of Gossiping About a Patient’s Private Life and Questioned If Reporting Was the Right Move
Social Issues

A Healthcare Worker Suspected a Doctor of Gossiping About a Patient’s Private Life and Questioned If Reporting Was the Right Move

3 months ago
Man Takes Down His Fence After New Neighbor Threatens to Sue – Then Watches Her Regret It
Social Issues

Man Takes Down His Fence After New Neighbor Threatens to Sue – Then Watches Her Regret It

1 month ago
Mom Installs Padlock On Soldier Son’s Room After Husband And Other Son Try To Loot His Belongings
Social Issues

Mom Installs Padlock On Soldier Son’s Room After Husband And Other Son Try To Loot His Belongings

3 months ago
Mom Explodes When Aunt Finally Fixes Teen’s Matted Hair
Social Issues

Mom Explodes When Aunt Finally Fixes Teen’s Matted Hair

2 weeks ago

TRENDING

Elizabeth Banks’ Life at 50: Her Real Name, Surrogacy Journey, and College-Sweetheart Love
CELEB

Elizabeth Banks’ Life at 50: Her Real Name, Surrogacy Journey, and College-Sweetheart Love

by Marry Anna
October 21, 2024
0

...

Read more
Wife Refuses To Take Her Name Off MIL’s House Deed Until $90K Loan Is Paid Back
Social Issues

Wife Refuses To Take Her Name Off MIL’s House Deed Until $90K Loan Is Paid Back

by Annie Nguyen
August 26, 2025
0

...

Read more
Dad Leaves a Legendary Tip After Waitress Scams His Family Out of a Deal
Social Issues

Dad Leaves a Legendary Tip After Waitress Scams His Family Out of a Deal

by Charles Butler
November 16, 2025
0

...

Read more
Karen Threatens A Pregnant Employee, Her Own Email Ends Her Career
Social Issues

Karen Threatens A Pregnant Employee, Her Own Email Ends Her Career

by Annie Nguyen
November 3, 2025
0

...

Read more
This Woman Spent Hours Detangling Her Daughter’s Friend’s Matted Hair
Social Issues

This Woman Spent Hours Detangling Her Daughter’s Friend’s Matted Hair

by Sunny Nguyen
September 8, 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