24-year-old refuses to switch desks with entitled coworker, she forces manager to intervene: 'I picked it first!'

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  • An employee sitting in an office chair talks to a group of coworkers working on beanie bags behind him in a modern office.
  • "[Am I wrong] for refusing to switch seats at work even though it made a coworker upset?"

    I (24M) work in a small office with about 10 people. We recently moved into a new building and our manager told us we could choose our desks on a first come,
  • first serve basis. I came in early that day and picked a seat near the window. It's not a special desk or anything, but it has good natural light and a bit of space, which helps me focus.
  • About an hour later, one of my coworkers, "Maya" (27F), came in and asked if I could swap seats with her because she gets migraines and the sunlight might bother her. I didn't have any
  • problem with her request until I realized the only other open spot was near the hallway door, where people constantly walk by and talk. I've sat there before and found it distracting.
  • I told her I understood her issue, but I really liked my current seat and had picked it early for that reason. I also suggested she could close the blinds a bit or
  • wear her blue light glasses like she usually does. She said I was being inconsiderate and told our manager.
  • Our manager didn't directly tell me to move, but asked if I could "be nice and accommodate" since it would help Maya feel better. I said I would prefer to keep my spot because I'm more
  • productive there and it's not against any rule. The manager said fine, but I could tell they were a bit disappointed.
  • Now Maya barely talks to me unless she has to, and another coworker told me it was "just a seat" and I could have been more understanding. I feel kind of bad
  • because I didn't want to make anyone uncomfortable, but I also think I was fair since I picked it first and had valid reasons for keeping it.
  • AITA for not giving up my seat? Edit for clarity: A lot of people pointed out that my wording about the desks was confusing, so here's what actually happened. The desk I picked is near a window but it only gets soft, indirect light.
  • Maya's usual desk is by a different window that gets strong direct sunlight, and that light. gives her migraines. She asked to switch so she could have my shaded spot. While she was talking to me, another coworker
  • took her seat, so the only desk left for me would've been the one near the hallway where everyone walks by and talks. That's why I didn't want to move. Hope that clears things up.
  • An employee works at his desk while a group of coworkers work on beanie bags behind him in a modern office.
  • amykaycannon • 1h ago This was a weird move from your manager to let you all sort it out in a scrum and then try to intervene. If she needs a medical accommodation, she can speak to the manager. It's
  • her right to ask but your right to refuse, given the unthoughtful way your manager approached this.
  • Rowan-The-Writer 57m ago • Tell your manager they shouldn't do a first come first serve policy if they don't actually mean it, and were trying to get you to switch by saying "be nice and accommodate", erm no sir/ma'am.
  • G. 54m ago Edited 16m ago If it's "just a seat", then it shouldn't matter to her. You did nothing wrong.
  • Helanore 48m ago • Sounds like she won't be in direct sunlight now that her original desk was taken and she is now near the door.

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