Employee faces strict rule by boss after making one mistake. ‘I work 9 hours, have no one to talk to, didn’t even get a raise.’
A university HR employee's single mistake led to a personal ban on AirPods. This new rule, not in the employee handbook, targets her alone. Other staff members are exempt. The employee feels singled out, especially without a recent salary raise. S...

In the detailed Reddit post, the woman, working as a university HR employee, explained that she had accidentally misplaced an important file, an error her boss later traced back through security footage.
Unwritten rule sparks fairness debate
According to the woman, the manager attributed the mistake to a distraction, which was caused by the fact that she was wearing AirPods and listening to music. As a result, her boss imposed a new restriction meant only for her. She was forbidden from wearing AirPods so that she would not make any mistakes again. However, the HR professional revealed that other employees were exempt from the rule.
What added to her frustration was that the new rule was not mentioned anywhere in the official employee handbook, which the organisation otherwise strictly follows. Justifying her need to wear AirPods, the employee described her work environment as increasingly difficult. Besides spending nine hours a day performing her duties, her office involves a quiet environment, where she has little to no interaction, always sitting across from her boss.
Employee weighs speaking up or quitting
With the new restriction in place, the employee admitted that the silence has become even more deafening, leaving her feeling ‘lonely and depressed’ throughout the workday. She also pointed out that despite putting in consistent effort over the past year, including improving workflows and making systems more efficient, she did not receive a salary hike. All of the factors combined left her questioning whether she was being singled out for a one-time mistake.
Unsure of her next steps, the employee turned to the internet for advice, asking whether such a rule can be enforced despite not being part of company policy and, more importantly, whether it was worth trying to resolve the issue or simply moving on. The internet delivered a mixed bag of opinions, with some asking her to quit, others urging her to explain the situation to her boss, and a few pointing out that the boss was making a big deal just for one mistake. However, a certain section of Redditors opined that being an HR, it was the employee’s mistake that led to the reprimanding.
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