I’m Alex, and for three years, I was the “Golden Child” of the office. But looking back, I wasn’t a star—I was a doormat. I was the person who organized the office birthdays, the one who stayed late to fix everyone else’s formatting errors, and the one who took on “quick favors” that turned into four-hour projects. I thought I was being indispensable; I was actually just being exploited.
The breaking point came last Tuesday. My boss, Sarah, walked over to my desk at 4:30 PM with a stack of files. “Alex, I need these organized and digitized by tomorrow morning. I know it’s a lot, but you’re so much faster at this than the interns.”
Normally, I would have smiled and canceled my gym plans. But that day, I looked at her and said, “I can’t do that, Sarah. I’m leaving at 5:00, and my plate is already full with the quarterly report you assigned this morning.”
The silence was deafening. Sarah looked at me like I’d just spoken in a foreign language. “Excuse me?” she stammered. I repeated myself, calmly explaining that I was prioritizing my actual job description over her administrative busywork. She got defensive, telling me she “needed” someone who was a “team player.”
I didn’t back down. I told her, “I’ve been a team player for three years, but the team only seems to play when I’m doing their work. From now on, I’m only doing what’s in my contract.”
Since then, the atmosphere has been… chilly. My coworkers are annoyed because they actually have to do their own filing now, and Sarah is looking for “new talent.” But for the first time in years, I left the office while the sun was still up, and I didn’t feel a shred of guilt. The “office doormat” has officially retired.
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