Employee Quits After Manager Gives Stranger Her Schedule, Manager Breaks Down

Retail jobs can be exhausting, especially when you are already stretched thin. When staffing is tight, every employee matters. Still, there are moments when a workplace mistake crosses into something that feels deeply unsafe.

One mall employee says she was already handling an entire section alone on most weekdays. Then her manager casually mentioned that someone claiming to be her father had called multiple times asking for her schedule. Worse, the manager had shared it.

When she realized it was not her dad and raised concerns, she says she was dismissed as dramatic. She quit immediately, leaving the store short staffed and her manager in tears. Scroll down to decide whether she acted impulsively or protected herself.

A retail worker quit immediately after her manager shared her schedule with a stranger

Employee Quits After Manager Gives Stranger Her Schedule, Manager Breaks Down
not the actual photo

'AITA For quitting on the spot even though we were understaff and it made my manager cry?'

I worked at a retail store in the mall. The store is divided into men’s, women’s and children’s clothes.

I always worked women’s and on the weekdays I was always the only employee in that entire section.

Yesterday myself and two other employees clocked into ours shifts.

My manager Lisa pulled my aside and told me “Your dads called the store five times asking for your schedule please tell him to stop”.

I got extremely confused because that didn’t sound like something my dad would do.

I even texted him and he said he never called the store once.

I had a bad feeling and asked Lisa if she gave “my dad” my schedule and she did she did.

I then told her that wasn’t my dad and she had no right telling a strange man my schedule.

She got annoyed and told me that it wasn’t a big deal and I was being dramatic.

I then quit on the spot which only left her and two other employee to watch the entire store.

She kept apologizing and even burst into tears because they were understaffed. AITA?

Workplace safety is not dramatic. It is foundational.

From a third-person perspective, the employee discovered that her manager disclosed her work schedule to a man claiming to be her father without verifying his identity. The employee confirmed that her father had never called. That means a stranger now had her schedule.

Sharing an employee’s work schedule with an unknown caller is widely considered unsafe practice.

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) emphasizes employer responsibility to maintain safe working environments and prevent harassment or stalking-related risks. Additionally, many corporate retail policies explicitly prohibit disclosing employee schedules to third parties due to safety concerns.

Stalking and workplace-targeted harassment are not rare. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, stalking often involves attempts to gather information about a victim’s schedule or location. Even if this incident turns out to be harmless, the risk assessment should err on the side of caution.

See also  Aunt Says Not Everyone Is Religious After Niece Claims Non-Believers Go To Hell

The manager’s reaction is also relevant. When confronted, she minimized the issue and labeled the employee “dramatic” rather than acknowledging a breach of safety. That response signals a lack of accountability. Only after the employee quit did the manager apologize.

Understaffing is a management problem, not an employee obligation. Labor law does not require workers to remain in a position where they feel unsafe unless bound by a specific contract. Most retail employment in the United States is at-will, meaning either party can terminate employment at any time.

The emotional consequence, making a manager cry, does not automatically convert a boundary into wrongdoing. Crying may reflect stress or guilt, but it does not negate the original safety lapse.

Objectively, quitting after a supervisor disclosed personal schedule information to a stranger and dismissed the concern is a defensible response. The staffing shortage was a business issue created by managerial error, not by the employee protecting herself.

Here’s how people reacted to the post:

These Reddit users warned this was dangerous and possibly illegal

Dsx-Kalista − NTA. That’s a f__king stalker. Your manager has literally endangered your life. You need to document this.

Someone with more legal knowledge can tell you what to do, but if something happens to you, she’s partially to blame.

In the mean time, make sure your taser is charged and your pepper spray is working.

eirwen29 − Uh. Yeah no. Nta. That’s horrifying.

Tanyec − NTA. That's scary, unprofessional, quite possibly illegal (depending on circumstances/location), and I'm glad you stood up for yourself.

Separately, if you have a known/suspected stalker, report him to the police immediately. Good luck!

ARC2060 − NTA. Your manager is an i__ot and should be reported to her boss for being so stupid and potentially putting you at risk.

It might be worth filing a report with the police about possible stalking.

It will probably end now that you've quit, but just in case, it would be good to have the police be aware.

Also, don't give this manager's name as a reference when you apply for a new job. You don't want her knowing where you work.

jack2bax − NTA at all. This is how you become the topic of a true crime podcast.

Some freakin’ stranger wants to know your whereabouts in the evening thereby when you will also walk alone to your car?

Seriously, get a taser or mace asap if you don’t already and have someone accompany you to/from your car for awhile.

samadantha − NTA what she did is a fire able offense for a lot of companies.

And compromises your safety a great deal. What if this “dad “ kidnapped you or hurt you on your way in or home??

This group said managers must never give out employee schedules

veesacard − NTA but creepy asf, I think quitting was a very sensible move since seems like someone is trying to stalk you.

And you’re quite right that she shouldn’t have given that info out without checking with you first,

as a manager she should know better and apologised instead of downplaying it.

Though there’s some beauty in her accusing you of being over dramatic for you to do the most dramatic thing and quit on the spot.

Good for you honestly. There’s probably a good reason they’re short staffed and it has nothing to do with your decision to leave.

Best of luck, hope you find another job quick! Edit: fixed typo stall to stalk

blanketkingdom − NTA. It’s like Manager 101 that you don’t give you your employees schedules.

You never know if someone is stalking your staff or otherwise being sketchy as f__k.

WinterBourne25 − NTA. I’ve managed retail. I would never give out an employee’s schedule.

I would have told “Dad” that he needs to get the schedule from you.

calliatom − NTA. Like. ..even if it was actually your father, you could have been long estranged and in danger from him for all she knew.

She shouldn't have been giving your schedule to anyone.

Bored_Llama1234 − NTA- she was in the wrong.

There's absolutely no reason she should've given out your schedule to anyone but you unless you approved her to do so.

There's no knowing what this individuals intentions were or why he wanted to know your schedule.

I think quitting was your best move and quite possibly the best move you could've done to ensure your safety.

These commenters shared real stalking stories to show the risk

BellLilly − First NTA, your manager put your safety at risk . I had a stalker calling repeatedly at one of my old jobs (doggy daycare).

He was calling to talk to me or get my schedule. My boss refused over and over, dude wouldn't leave a message, just demanded my schedule.

I finally took the call, recognized his voice, yelled at him and hung up.

I told my boss that as far as anyone on the phone was concerned, I no longer work there.

I have a cell phone, the people I know can and will reach me there.

The newest manager (power tripping wench) took a call and GAVE MY FULL SCHEDULE!

Despite instructions that I'm not there if there phone rings for me.

My stalker showed up and just watched me on the camera in the front office for a while.

When I disappeared from the camera view he shoved another employee against a wall and let himself into the back to come find me.

He came face to face with one of our large male managers and a dog that HATED new people.

Doggo nipped, growled and lunged (I'm pretty sure the guy pissed himself a little)

before I could take him away and my manager "handled" my stalker before the police took him away.

He never would have shown up if that manager hadn't given my schedule and jeopardized the safety of everyone there

sumerquen − NTA When I worked as a lead, I used to either say I can’t confirm or deny if someone by that name works here,

or straight up say they don’t work here and contact the person they were trying to reach. One day this girl kept calling for her boyfriend.

Well I knew a little of the situation but not the full story but I did know they broke up.

After the first time I told my coworker and he told me the full story. The first time she was just asking for him.

The second time he said his brother in law (her brother) was looking for him,

the third time she said his brother in law was hurt and she needed him to come help. She called more times with more rants.

The last time she called she said to tell him that she was there with her brother. Welp they were there to beat him up.

One of the big boss had to call security and the cops. they started to pass out fliers of the brothers face stating that he wasn’t allowed in.

My coworker had to be escorted to his car. Turns out the ex beat him up and lied that he beat her.

I believe all three got arrested but only the brother was charged. Long story short.

Don’t give out employees schedule.

fieleamcknight − NTA. She gave some random creep your schedule, and expects you to continue working there when whoever

this is knows when and where you work? You had every right to walk out, especially after she minimized your feelings about it.

This commenter believed the manager’s action may have broken the law

Royal-Otherwise − NTA and I’m pretty sure what she did was illegal

Retail shifts come and go, but personal safety isn’t something anyone should gamble with. While the manager’s tears tugged at some heartstrings, most readers felt the bigger issue was trust and the very real risk that came with giving a stranger someone’s whereabouts.

Was quitting mid-shift extreme, or was it the only move that made sense in a moment like that? Would you have stayed to smooth things over, or walked out the second your schedule became public property? Share your hot takes below.

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

© 2026 cuanhua | All rights reserved