Ex-Employees Are Sharing Their "Well, That'll Do It" Moment That Made Them Finally Quit An Awful Job

When I asked members of the BuzzFeed Community to share their "I gotta get out of here" moment at a toxic job, I expected plenty of wild stories from hard-working people who absolutely deserve better. However, the responses were so much more soul-sucking than I ever could've predicted, and most of them centered around one issue in particular: toxic bosses.

man looking upset with caption "mmm mmm that's another level. Not ok."
man looking upset with caption "mmm mmm that's another level. Not ok."

Ryan Murphy Productions / Glee / Via giphy.com

How much stress at work is just way too much? I know we all need money to live, but after a certain amount of torment, we suddenly know in our hearts that we deserve to work somewhere that actually values us as humans. Let's get into the stories of people who decided enough is enough and finally got out of there.

NFL Films / Via giphy.com

1."My old boss was awful from the start, but what made me leave was when my parents sent chocolate-covered strawberries for my birthday to the office. My boss just expected me to give him some, but I told him they were for me, and I didn't want to share. He then proceeded to oink at me the rest of the day."

woman saying "I would absolutely freak out"
woman saying "I would absolutely freak out"

NBC / Via giphy.com

—Anonymous

2."I used to work at a company that would teach children about sea life — sharks, jellyfish, tropical fish, etc. I loved the animals and would regularly go see them, but I wasn't allowed to feed them myself. One day, I noticed on the feeding schedule that they hadn't been fed in a much longer time than is safe, so I asked my boss if that was correct. He told me that he feeds the animals less so they don't poop as much so he wouldn't have to clean the tank as often. I quit without notice and reported them to every animal rights agency I could think of."

—jone_says_wow
Kali9 / Getty Images

3."The micromanaging kept getting worse and worse. I knew it was time to quit after I was pulled for a manager meeting where they had added up all the times I had logged out to use the restroom the day before — it was just over nine minutes for a ten-hour shift. They presented this info to me like 'Well, well, well, what are we gonna do about this?' and told me that since I was spending SO much time in the restroom, I needed to bring a doctor's note that says I have to pee a lot."

woman saying "You're actually serious?"
woman saying "You're actually serious?"

CBC Television / Schitt's Creek / Via giphy.com

haleyhelena

4."My husband and I were trying to conceive and I had a miscarriage. I called my boss to tell him (you know, that kind of workplace where 'we're a big family') and explained to him that I needed a day off. I was waiting for a 'take the time you need' kind of response, but instead, he told me to come to work because 'it happens all the time.'"

woman getting an ultrasound

5."I'm a teacher and spent seven years at a toxic high school with terrible academic standards. Right before school started, the principal told me I would be teaching two Latin courses that year. When I said I hadn't taken Latin since college and hadn't really kept it up, hadn't ever taught a language, and that I really wasn't qualified to teach it, they blew it off and said I'd be fine."

teacher looking confused and shrugging at her desk
teacher looking confused and shrugging at her desk

Warner Bros. Television / Abbott Elementary / Via giphy.com

"Knowing that the school did not care about whether they were setting up a teacher for success, and more importantly they were not setting up the kids for success; I knew I had to get out of there. There were SO many other things about the school that were bad, but this is the one that broke me for sure."

tronchin

6."I used to work in hotel food and beverage for Disneyland. A really horrible family was making their way around the fine dining locations on property wreaking havoc. They ended up at my restaurant with a 'golden ticket,' meaning the location they visited the night before got desperate trying to make the family happy to the point of telling us to give them whatever they wanted and to charge it to the previous restaurant's account. We took an incredible amount of extra care with everything the family wanted, and they still found reasons to send their food back three times, complain about everything, and demand we give them another 'golden ticket' to another restaurant."

mickey and minnie mouse in restaurant

7."I had a meeting with the district manager about raises and my concerns about them overworking and underpaying me and my coworkers. Her solution? 'I can’t give you guys a raise, but I can work you more hours.' Her solution for us being overworked and underpaid was to overwork and underpay us even more! The entire staff, including my store manager, quit on the spot within days of each other. It was pretty badass."

man saying "that...doesn't help at all"
man saying "that...doesn't help at all"

ABC / The Good Doctor / Via giphy.com

—Anonymous

8."I had a difficult boss who was amazing with the work she did, but treated the workers poorly. The kicker for me was when the company raised its minimum wage. I’d been working there for seven years and started from the bottom. I'd earned many raises to get up to barely over this new minimum wage that now un-trained workers were getting as they walked in the door."

man looking upset in work meeting with colleagues

9."My boss was an emotionally unstable narcissist whose behavior and attitude were so unpredictable that I lived with a constant dread of what she might do or say next. She constantly insinuated that our jobs were in danger. She was very insecure in her position and was always paranoid that I was trying to undermine her or take her job."

"Any time I presented any idea for how we might improve our efficiency, she would point out how that strategy could never work, and then two weeks later she’d present the same idea as if it were her own. I put up with it for a shameful amount of time. Eventually, I’d had it and I found another job. They’re now being investigated for some shady practices. Such a blessing to not be associated with that business."

jessicaturnerc

10."I asked to work in the company office that was closer to my house just once a week instead of the office that’s in the city (where my manager works) because it was the easier commute, free parking, no traffic…my manager said to me 'No. Your commute is not my problem.'"

woman crying while driving car
woman crying while driving car

Paramount / Kacey Musgraves / Via giphy.com

"She just didn’t want me there because she couldn’t micromanage me in a different location. I was at the company for seven years at that point. I planned my exit after that conversation."

lazyriver

11."A customer harassed me verbally and sexually over the phone, asked what time I worked until, and said he was gonna come to the store. He kept calling and cursing at me. When I called my boss to report it, the only thing he said was to make sure I treated the man professionally when he came in."

notomorganc

12."I quit when it became obvious that despite repeated assurances for several months they would be hiring more people in my department, it just wasn't going to happen. I was essentially doing the job of three people. They couldn't even muster up a facade of giving a shit, so suddenly, I couldn't either. I resigned a week after this revelation."

man saying "Oh! I don't care"
man saying "Oh! I don't care"

Bright/Kauffman/Crane Productions / Friends / Via giphy.com

kishbish

13."I had taken some time off of work because my mom had just passed away from cancer and my dad had unexpectedly passed away a few months before that. I finally decided to get an easy job to ease myself back into work and got a job at a telemarketing place as a supervisor. I had to report to the office manager. She was nice at first and then would use my parents' deaths against me. Any time I made a mistake or did something she didn't like, she'd say something like, 'Wow, I bet your parents would be disappointed in you.'"

"I finally had it and told her I was quitting. The only thing she said was, 'I won't miss you always crying in the bathroom about your parents. They're very ashamed of you, I'm sure.' She was awful and got fired a few months after I left. Good riddance."

catspizzasleep

14."I worked for a product photo studio for over two years. We were technically contractors, and we learned later that they hadn’t made us full-time employees through illegal loopholes. But, that wasn’t what did it. We signed a client who sold meat wholesale to grocery stores. We had to start photographing raw pigs’ heads. Our massive studio didn’t have air conditioning. Our bosses had absolutely no idea how to keep us safe and keep our studio sanitary. They didn’t buy us the right safety equipment, nor did they care how hot it was (they were upstairs in air-conditioned offices.) Once one of the employees contracted salmonella, I called OSHA."

woman making phone call
woman making phone call

Ryan Seacrest Productions / Keeping Up With The Kardashians / Via giphy.com

—Anonymous

15."I made a minor mistake on an inventory count that was easily fixable. I got a write-up, which isn’t the problem. The manager asked why I had so much 'distraction', and after I told them, they told me I needed to be more focused. Why was I distracted and unfocused? My mom had died suddenly two weeks prior and I was fresh back from bereavement leave."

duct_tape_heart

16."I’m a nurse and at this specific point in my life, I was so burnt out I was desperate for time off. I put a vacation request in and weeks later, I still hadn’t heard if it was approved or not. I spoke with my boss and she told me being burnt out wasn’t a good excuse for a vacation, so she’d just been waiting for me to forget that I put in a vacation request at all. WTF?! I put my two weeks in then and there."

—absurrdturrd
Laylabird / Getty Images

17."I decided to quit after all of my coworkers tested positive for COVID in the summer of 2020 and were told by management to keep it a secret so no one would 'freak out.'"

allisoncopley0319

18."I called out for my shift because my baby was sick. This is after YEARS of perfect attendance. Aside from my measly three weeks of maternity leave, I had literally never missed a shift before. The two days after this were my days off. When I returned after those three days my boss had completely removed me from the schedule. When I confronted him he said that he 'assumed I didn't want to work anymore.' This was after years of other passive-aggressive BS. So I said 'Yeah, you're right,' and I never went back."

man putting up a peace sign and then disappearing
man putting up a peace sign and then disappearing

Vine / Nileseyy Niles / Via giphy.com

s_uffel

19."I worked for a small business, but they kept the staff unreasonably small. Several times while I worked there, I lost scheduled hours I needed because the ONLY OTHER staff member scheduled with me had called out and no one (not even management) would step in so we just wouldn't open that day! My final straw was being told to find coverage for a shift I needed off, or I couldn’t have it off. There were FOUR employees. Who was I supposed to ask?!"

—Anonymous

20."I was teaching in a summer camp. The camp director had changed that year, and, to put it mildly, she was a complete jerk. She had no teaching experience whatsoever but still tried to tell all the teachers how and what to teach. She seemed to think we were more babysitters than actual teachers. The final straw came when the teachers were told we had to wear a clown suit in class, to entertain the children better."

woman in clown costume saying "management sucks"
woman in clown costume saying "management sucks"

BBC America / Killing Eve / Via giphy.com

"I told her that I'm not a clown, and my job is to teach, and asked if she has ever tried to discipline bad students while dressed as a clown, and jingling all over the place. I got a written warning for not doing as she asked, as did two other teachers. We all quit the next day."

peterh4394dacb0

21."I worked a part-time job as a server at a counter service food joint. Every time I made a mistake, my boss would slap me on the hand. Literally. After I realized it wasn’t an accident, I knew I had to leave that place immediately."

aribuckley14

22."I had just started a new restaurant job, and I’ve been in the business for 16 years, so I’ve seen it all. However, at this new job, my general manager was an anomaly. I was bartending and he walked around the corner and actually yelled at me for the sound of my voice. Not that I was talking too loud or using inappropriate language. It was an actual 'I can not stand the sound of you talking.' He requested I not speak behind the bar. That job was a joke, so I immediately walked out. ✌🏼"

woman looking upset picking up a bottle of alcohol and walking out of a room
woman looking upset picking up a bottle of alcohol and walking out of a room

ABC / How To Get Away With Murder / Via giphy.com

abutterworthhh

23.And finally, "I was two slides into presenting a strategy I spent months crafting for my boss and our CEO. The CEO stopped me mid-sentence and said, 'When we first hired you, I thought you were a very smart and good worker, now I think not so much.'"

man saying "Why would you say that?"
man saying "Why would you say that?"

Fox / New Girl / Via giphy.com

"My boss said nothing to defend me. This was on top of being incredibly overworked, significantly underpaid, getting emails in the middle of the night, and micromanaging within an inch of my life. I'd had enough. That afternoon I started filling out job applications."

—Anonymous

I rest my case. These experiences give us undeniable evidence that more often than not, employees don't quit a job so much as they quit a boss. It also tells me that everyone needs to be extra nice to restaurant workers and teachers, because they already go through enough.

Now, let me ask, do you relate to any of these? First of all — I'm so sorry. Second of all, please feel free to share in the comments! Your stories may help to inspire others to finally break free from the chains of their own toxic workplaces.

Note: Some responses have been edited for length and/or clarity.