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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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She thought the para was her personal sub, resigned when called out on it, got mad when her resignation was accepted
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The job might have paid modestly, but the sense of authority was pure luxury. She managed to treat competence like rebellion, as if a para helping students instead of fetching coffee was a threat to her status. That misplaced power turns every boundary into an insult, every inconvenience into sabotage. It’s the kind of workplace drama that doesn’t need a villain, just someone who can’t tolerate equality.
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Image is representative only and does not depict the actual subjects of the story.
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When she offered her resignation, it wasn’t a decision, it was a dare. The expectation was an outpouring of regret, maybe a negotiation, some recognition of her sacrifice. Instead, she got a simple acceptance. The shock must have been spiritual. She turned instantly from overworked martyr to underappreciated benefactor, recounting every penny spent at fundraisers as proof of her worth.
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This whole episode has that familiar rhythm of people who confuse generosity with leverage. They buy affection like job security and crumble when it expires. Every office, every school, every small team has one. And somehow, they always think they’re the glue when they’re really just glitter.
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