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VP Fires Young Employee Weeks After Both His Parents Die, Sparks Outrage Over “Heartless” Decision

by Annie Nguyen
December 7, 2025
in Social Issues

A young employee returned to work just weeks after losing both parents in a car accident, and found himself fighting for his job while still grieving. According to the VP who shared this story online, the company had initially praised the 22-year-old as one of its brightest new hires.

But after a month of paid leave and only a few weeks back at work, management decided his slower performance justified termination. The employee’s reaction? A calm but furious exit that left even the VP stunned.

The backlash that followed, from her boyfriend and tens of thousands of Redditors, raised a massive question about grief, work culture, and what employers really owe people navigating traumatic loss.
Want the full tea? Dive into the original story below!

A tragic accident, a month of bereavement leave, and a shaky return to sales work set the stage for a firing that quickly spiraled into online outrage

VP Fires Young Employee Weeks After Both His Parents Die, Sparks Outrage Over “Heartless” Decision
Not the actual photo

AITA For Firing An Employee After His Parents Died?

I'm the VP of Sales at a software company and one

of our sales development reps parents passed away

at the beginning of April, sadly they were involved

in a car crash and both lost their lives.

Now the employee in question in very young 22 year old guy

and has been with us for about 10 months now.

He's a great employee and we were thinking

about promotions in the next \~6 months for him.

His job is a high paying one for a new grad, about \~90k with commission

and base so we expect a lot from this position.

Because of the accident we let him take a 1 month paid leave of absence

from work and he's returned a few weeks ago and his performance is severely lacking.

He's super unmotivated, not cold calling, out reaching to prospects

for the last 2-3 weeks enough since he's come back.

Our whole mgmt team has noticed this and we decided

to let him go because we feel like he'd need months and months

to be able to produce again and we can't just wait that long.

We called him into a meeting on Friday afternoon and gave him the bad news,

he was very calm and rude about it.

Told us to go f__k ourselves and got up and went to his desk grabbed his few things and left.

I thought this was very very unprofessional and extremely rude.

I told my boyfriend about all of this and he said myself

and my mgmt team are a bunch of asses and pricks with no hearts..AITA?.​.

Grief arrives like a tidal wave, and no matter how capable or hardworking a person is, the world cannot be navigated the same way while drowning. This story reflects that truth painfully well.

A young employee lost both of his parents suddenly, an unthinkable rupture in the foundation of his life. When he returned to work, he didn’t just return to tasks; he returned carrying a weight that altered every part of his emotional landscape. And instead of receiving patience, he was met with loss again, this time, of his livelihood.

The emotional dynamics here revolve around shock, trauma, and unmet expectations. From management’s perspective, productivity had dropped sharply, and they feared a long recovery period. But from the employee’s perspective, the world he knew had ended only weeks before.

His disengagement wasn’t laziness; it was grief manifesting as exhaustion, numbness, and cognitive fog. When he was fired, his calmness wasn’t professionalism; it was the stillness of someone already beaten down by circumstances too large to articulate.

A fresh perspective emerges when considering age and developmental psychology. At 22, many people are still leaning on parents as emotional anchors, even if not daily. Losing both parents simultaneously is not just a heartbreak; it is an identity-level rupture.

Older managers might see grief through the lens of past losses they navigated with adult coping skills. But someone barely out of college lacks the emotional scaffolding to rebuild themselves quickly.

What appears to management as “underperformance” may simply be the neurological paralysis of acute grief.

Expert research further clarifies why grief can so profoundly disrupt a person’s daily functioning. In the study Neuropsychological Correlates of Early Grief in Bereaved Older Adults (Hoffmann et al., 2024), researchers examined 93 cognitively healthy adults within 12 months of losing a loved one.

And it found that “bereaved older adults with higher grief symptoms performed worse than those with lower symptoms and non-bereaved participants on executive functioning and attention and processing speed measures.”

This demonstrates that grief does not merely affect emotions; it can significantly impair cognitive processes such as focus, decision-making, and mental speed, making normal levels of productivity or concentration extremely difficult during early bereavement.

This insight reframes the entire event; the employee didn’t fail his job; his brain was still reeling from catastrophic loss.

The emotionally intelligent managerial response would have been support, a structured performance plan, and acknowledgment that healing is nonlinear. Instead, he was asked to perform as though his world hadn’t just exploded.

So, workplaces often underestimate grief, but compassionate leadership requires patience, structure, and humanity. Productivity can be rebuilt. A broken spirit takes far longer.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

These commenters said management acted too quickly and lacked empathy

milee30 − YTA for firing him without first going through the steps of describing his issues

to him and giving him a chance to improve.

He's been back for only 2-3 weeks. It's not about "having heart",

it's about making a dumb business decision for both you and him.

So much smarter to work with this guy to get him back on track after a temporary setback

than to push the eject button and have to find and start over with a new person.Dumb.

queencuntpunt − YTA, generally people receive a warning

about their performance before they get fired.

You gave him bereavement leave and then fired him immediately after because he wasn't performing.

gratespeller − Yup, congrats YTA. If this is isn't a shitpost well done,

you pulled a poor mourning kid's remaining stability and livelihood out from under him.

4 weeks after his parents passed away.

Hope the rest of the team's moral stays high after this one.

RelevantLeg − YTA, you didn’t even give him a few weeks slack after he lost not one,

but BOTH of his parents! Instead of firimg him you could have made a plan

to help him get back on track, show him you cared

(which you obviously don’t, but still) ..yeah, major dickmove!

These Redditors noted that proper performance plans and support should have come first

Shortandsweet33 − YTA. Surely this is a shitpost.

HardBoiledLibrary − YTA- There were better options than just straight up firing him.

Maybe have a meeting about his job performance? See if he needs counseling?

This dude is clearly in the depths of despair, firing him was immature.

Pukit − YTA. I’ve been a manager for a fair while and this is a horrid way of dealing with it.

Id be surprised if he doesn’t take your company to an onbudsman for an unfair dismissal.

Where was the caution, warnings, written letters?

Hopefully he’ll have your company and you over a barrel.

TubiDaorArya − YTA. You expected him to be up and ready to work his ass off

after only 1 month? He's 22 years old man.

He lost his parents. They won't be there for him for his promotion, wedding, children.

He's trying to process all this, and you and those assholes with no hearts decided

that you can't wait for him to recover.

Of course you're the a__hole. At least own up to it.

These users emphasized grief’s real impact and condemned the lack of compassion

blackmetalwarlock − You are absolutely the a__hole. 100% YTA.

Death is incredibly serious and takes time to heal from.

He is a human being, I am so appauled that you made the decision to do that.

The stress of losing people you hold close is completely unimaginable.

I can't even begin to understand how much worse

that gets after you lose your income directly after.

Seriously, I am just so disgusted with this action.

Especially considering he was a great employee who you seemed to feel had room to grow with the company.

Nwo_mayhem − Damn, you're 100% a giant stinky a__hole for this.

My best friend lost both of his parents in a similar fashion,

and his employer was phenomenal about easing him back into the role,

providing feedback, and supporting him along the way as he acclimated.

Most importantly, they didn't abandon him, and he now speaks candidly

about how having a job and purpose kept him engaged and provided him with a reason

to go on and not take his own life too.

And what'd y'all do? Sure, you have him a month of bereavement,

and then treated him like every other "normal" employee upon his return.

Can you practice a little empathy here? If BOTH your parents passed away in your early 20's,

would a month be sufficient for your grieving? Maybe you're some sort of advanced human,

buy this happens to my friend at age 29 in 2016 and he still lives his life one day at a time.

This is an excellent case of when you, as a manager, should've practiced equity over equality.

Holding him to the standard of non-grieving employees is bananas, y'all are wylin.

And the guilt that's gnawing away at your conscience? Well deserved 👌

TheMeechums − YTA. Your employee needed more support and deserved an opportunity to improve.

The employee should have been coached and offered mental health assistance.

Edit: Double checked to make sure.

Both parents unexpectedly at the beginning of April, so at best 2 months ago.

Absolutely awful thing you’ve done.

In the end, this wasn’t just a workplace dispute; it was a collision between human grief and corporate impatience. The young employee needed time, structure, and compassion; instead, he lost the last stabilizing part of his life.

Was the VP trying to uphold performance standards, or did she let business urgency eclipse empathy altogether? And in a world where tragedy can strike any of us, how should companies balance productivity with humanity? Share your thoughts below; this is one debate where every perspective has weight.

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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