They’d planned their first real vacation in years. Everything was approved, booked, and ready to go—until HR called them in two days before departure and eliminated their role.
The meeting was icy and scripted. When they asked about the already approved vacation, HR waved it off: “We’ll handle that later.” No details. No reassurance.
“Later” turned out to be a final paycheck—with no vacation pay. An email followed, explaining that once terminated, approved leave no longer counted.
Something felt off. So they checked the handbook.
There it was in black and white: approved vacation must be honored or paid out.
They replied with a screenshot and a single question: “Can you explain this?” No anger. Just policy.
HR went quiet. The next morning, they called back with an “adjustment.” The termination date was moved so the employee was technically still on staff—and officially on vacation.
They were told not to work, not to log in, and to take the trip. When a manager texted mid-vacation with a “quick question,” they didn’t reply.
After returning, HR offered a temporary reinstatement. They declined.
They took the vacation, got the money they were owed, and walked away on their own terms—with dignity.