The confessions of a 23-year-old award-winning employee unravel a harrowing tale of workplace betrayal, mental abuse, and ultimate survival. Read this thrilling true story of how success turned into sabotage.
It Started Like a Dream—Then Became a Living Nightmare
When I first walked into the office as a bright-eyed 22-year-old, freshly placed from campus, I thought I had made it. My first job. My first paycheck. My first recognition. Within months, I was awarded for exceptional performance. My inbox was flooded with congratulatory emails. My parents were proud. I felt like I was flying.
But what no one warned me about was how quickly that altitude could turn into a nosedive.
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The Confessions No One Hears Until It’s Too Late
In the second year, a new team lead joined. Let’s call her Senior A. Her smile never quite reached her eyes. The first few weeks were uneventful. Then began the micromanagement. The gaslighting. The soul-splitting meetings. She would say things like “I don’t like to micromanage” and then ask me to send updates every 30 minutes. Every small delay, even if it was caused by her unavailability or miscommunication, would somehow end up in my review.
I would wake up in cold sweats. Messages on Teams would make my hands tremble. I started associating the Outlook ping with panic. It wasn’t just work anymore. It was war. And the battlefield was my mind.
They Put Me on PIP—Then They Played a Bigger Game
One morning, I was officially placed on a Performance Improvement Plan. It felt like being handed a noose in a silk box. Senior B, another teammate, worked closely with me. She supported me, often praising my work openly.
But here’s where the confessions truly begin.
She pulled me aside one day and whispered the truth: “The manager told me to change my review and make it match Senior A’s feedback.”
I stood there, blinking back tears, each word slashing deeper than the last. So it was never about my work. It was a decision already made. A performance act with me as the villain.
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They Called It Feedback—I Called It Character Assassination
Meetings with the senior manager brought more confusion. Instead of offering resolution, he said maybe I should “befriend Senior A.” As if friendship could erase emotional abuse. As if pretending would save me. As if silence was the solution.
But I wasn’t quiet. I spoke up. Loudly. Repeatedly. And that was my final mistake.
I was removed.
Just like that.
The Pattern I Discovered After I Left
In the weeks that followed, the puzzle pieces began falling into place. I learned that I wasn’t the only one placed on PIP under Senior A. Several others had suffered the same fate. Whispers of budget cuts. Silent terminations. All masked as “performance issues.”
If they had simply said “we can’t keep you,” I would’ve accepted it. But they chose cruelty. They chose to crush my spirit. They chose to bury my confidence under layers of falsified feedback.
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I Left the Office—But I Couldn’t Leave the Pain
The pain didn’t stop after I left. I tried competitive exams but failed. Not because I wasn’t smart, but because I no longer believed in myself. I questioned every achievement. Was it luck? Was it real?
The confessions I tell myself now are quiet ones. I whisper them at night, hoping to hear something good back.
I smile less. I sleep less. I feel like a ghost of who I was at 23.
So Why Am I Telling You This?
Because someone needs to.
Because the confessions aren’t just about trauma—they’re about truth. About how workplaces can break people behind polished HR policies and fake “employee-first” banners. About how nobody hears you when you scream softly. And about how survival sometimes looks like breathing through tears.
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What Helped Me Start Healing (And Might Help You Too)
- Journaling every single day. I wrote the confessions of my broken self, and slowly, my real voice started coming back.
- Talking to a therapist. It felt like removing bandages off old wounds, but at least I could feel something again.
- Reaching out to others who went through the same. There’s a strange strength in knowing you’re not alone.
- Applying again: with better boundaries. I’m more cautious now, but I’m also wiser.
You’re Not Alone
If you’ve been crushed, gaslighted, or broken at work, let the confessions in this story remind you of one thing—you are not weak for being hurt.
You are strong for surviving.
And you are still the person who once won awards, who made it through tough exams, who showed up every day.
They took your job, not your worth.
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