Coworker attempts to push their work onto employee, employee refuses to accept it, inciting discord amongst their team: 'My manager is asking if I could be more flexible'

Advertisement
  • Two coworkers work together on work on their laptop
  • "My coworker has a habit of overcommitting and then panicking when she can’t handle it."

    I work at a mid-sized office, and one of my coworkers, let's call her Charlotte (her nickname), has a habit of overcommitting and then panicking when she can't handle it. Yesterday, she asked me to cover her shift, not because she had a legitimate emergency, but because she "didn't feel like dealing with her workload and i politely said no, explaining that I
  • already had my own deadlines and can't take on extra work at the last minute. She got visibly upset and started hinting that I'm "not being a team player" and that I should "sacrifice a little for the sake of the office." Now several coworkers are whispering about me being "selfish,"
  • and my manager is asking if I could be more flexible. I am torn because I don't want to look uncooperative, but it feels unreasonable to ask someone to cover for you simply because you don't feel like working. So AITJ for refusing to cover her shift?
  • Holiday... In what world are you responsible for coworkers? You said no it ends there. If people are talking about you, direct the conversation to how she overcommits.
  • PieFaceLust You're definitely NTA here. Covering someone's shift last minute because they didn't manage their workload isn't "team player," it's enabling bad habits. Setting boundaries is important, especially when you're juggling your own stuff. If management wants flexibility, they should clarify expectations and make sure workloads are reasonable instead of guilt- tripping people. Stand your ground!
  • Obse55ive NTJ. One of your coworkers asked you to cover a shift and you said no. It doesn't matter what the reason is. Does this person call out a lot? Why are your coworkers and manager asking for YOU to be more flexible? Does the rest of the office cover for this person? If this person needs an accommodation or FMLA for stress/panic attacks, that doesn't fall on you. The manager is responsible for coverage.
  • geo8x6 If you are doing her work, then she can give you her salary since she doesn't deserve it

Tags

Scroll Down For The Next Article