Twelve years in the same office changes a person. It makes you sharper, quieter, and very good at spotting the moment something shifts — even before anyone says it out loud. When it finally did for me, I didn’t cry, bargain, or crumble. I listened, I recorded, and I planned.
My name is Misty. I’m 37, a single mom of two, and until recently, I was the unofficial backbone of a mid-sized logistics company with a breakroom that smelled like burnt coffee and resignation. I handled payroll, scheduling, contracts… basically everything that kept the operation from collapsing like an undercooked cake.
And then one day, without warning, Rick decided he didn’t need the backbone anymore.Rick — my boss. A man who called every woman under 40 “hon,” every woman over 40 “kiddo,” and thought following three women on LinkedIn made him “an ally.” The kind of guy whose smile was a neon sign for incoming trouble.
For years, he piled his workload onto me and called it “collaboration.” I put up with it because kids need shoes, lights need to stay on, and my parents aren’t getting any younger. So I stayed late, kept my navy notebook filled, and bit my tongue.
Until I heard him call me “dead weight.”It started subtly, like frost creeping across a window. Suddenly Rick cared about margins. Suddenly my formatting was “sloppy.” Suddenly I was getting written up for being two minutes late after dropping my son at school.
Meanwhile, Hannah — the new 26-year-old assistant with glossy lips and a phone permanently glued to her hand — was suddenly Rick’s personal sun, and he orbited her like a cheap satellite.
One day I overheard him in the breakroom, voice dripping praise all over her. “You’ve got a natural touch, hon. You’re going places.” She giggled like it was a rehearsal.