You need to be your own boss no matter what it takes
I Refuse to Be Babysitted While Working From Home — I’m Not a Toddler

This is David’s story.
Dear Bright Side,
I’ve been working remotely for the last 3 years, and my boss tracks all the remote workers with some kind of software that detects activity. Last week, I got an email from my boss saying, “I recently had a look at your activity, and it shows that you’ve only done 3 hours of work. That’s very alarming.”
I said that there must have been a bug with the software because I was online with clients all day. His only reply was, “The data doesn’t lie. You can’t be trusted to work remotely, so I’ll put in the order to have you moved to the office.”
I was shocked but didn’t want to talk before I figured out what was really happening. So I started keeping an eye on my tracker and saw that after a couple of hours of work, it froze. I couldn’t get it to react in any way. All I could do was wait for it to start again.
I took a screen recording of what was happening. And added it to my private list of work-related documents, which included every deliverable I completed, every email I sent, and my personal project tracker, which showed that I had done 11 hours of billable work.
I sent all those documents to my boss and cc’d the HR department and the head of the department. The next day, I went to the office. My boss walked in and panicked after seeing me. He rushed to his office and opened his laptop, only to see the email.
He went silent after that. He couldn’t even bring himself to apologize. When HR called us in, he just said, “The software must have bugs.” I was stunned by his reaction, so I said, “Maybe you should learn to trust people and not spy on them.”
After that, HR scheduled a management training session, which was compulsory. But things are tense between my boss and me now, and I don’t really know how to react. So Bright Side, was I wrong to report my boss to HR? Or was it the right thing to do?
Regards
David G.
Thank you for reaching out and sharing your story with us, David. We understand how difficult this situation must be, so we’ve put together a few tips that might be helpful.
Stay professional, not apologetic.

You were covering your butt but it may be at the cost of your job. Now your boss is going to look for ways to get back at you. Document everything just incase.
You did the right thing. The fact your boss would not apologize is clear evidence you are working in the wrong place! Start looking for a new job.
You were not wrong. In fact your boss was micromanaging you too much instead of just getting the job done. Now he has to suffer the consequences of his own actions.
Make him feels dead inside. Tell the client what your boss accuse you (which indirectly accused them too) Instantly grave yard for your boss. I do the same at my previous old boss, I get fired, but he get CRUSHED, because the clients cancel / discontinued projects which makes lost almost 2M bucks.
You were just covering your own ass. If they weren't trying to micromanage your time, this wouldn't have happened. Their go to was calling you a liar, rather than checking out your claims of a glitch in the system. You were NOT wrong. Bosses that are more concerned about CONTROLLING their workers than getting the ACTUAL JOB DONE, need to be taught that they CAN'T do that, HOWEVER it needs to be done.
Your boss tried to move you back to the office without verifying the facts, then doubled down when confronted. You didn’t escalate out of spite; you escalated because the accusation threatened your job and reputation. In situations where a manager abuses surveillance tools, HR becomes your only shield. Now that the truth is documented, carry yourself with calm confidence. No over-explaining. No “making it up to him.” Let the professionalism come from your side, because it didn’t come from his.
Keep documenting quietly for the next few months.

You just pointed out a flaw in the software, monitoring technology is essential to making work from home remain a viable option. While obviously many will do their work, there are also those that would take advantage of the lack of monitoring to slack off. Your response wasn't very professional, to preserve your current relationship with your boss, you should likley have not accused him of spying, and just acknowled the glitchy software, as your boss was just doing his job in making sure his employees were working. Saying his job of maintaining worker productivity was spying would look childish to anyone in the room, and likley why you didn't get an apology.
Your boss already showed he’s willing to believe flawed software over a human being. That won’t change overnight. For the next quarter, keep screenshots of activity freezes, time logs, and a quick weekly summary of work completed. You don’t need to send it to anyone. Just keep it in your folder. If tension turns into retaliation, you’ll have a clear trail that shows a pattern of you doing your job and him making assumptions. It’s not paranoia, it’s insurance.
Control the tone of future interactions.
Right now he’s embarrassed, and embarrassed managers sometimes act petty. The best move is to reset the dynamic yourself. Short, neutral phrases like: “Let me know what you need from me on this.” Or “Here’s today’s progress update.” This signals: You’re cooperative, but not intimidated.
Over time, routines like this shift the tension away because he can’t feed conflict when you’re giving him nothing emotional to push against. You’re not punishing him, you’re simply setting the tone he failed to set as a leader.
David finds himself in a difficult situation, but it isn’t something he can’t fix. He’s not the only one with workplace struggles, though.
Another one of our readers reached out to share their story. You can read it here: I Refuse to Work With the Manager Who Fired Me Years Ago.
Comments
The fact that you use the word babysitted instead of babysat and The way you projected your boss to act after you proved it was a computer error doesn't make sense at all. I would be questioning your hours if that's the computer said and if you showed me a screen recording it was the computer's fault I'd happily fix it for you and apologize for the misunderstanding. This reads like the 5th grader wrote it.
I believe he did everything right. His manager should've doubled check himself before making an accusation. Simply put software glitches all the time.
Related Reads
12 Stories That Remind Us to Lead With Kindness During Life’s Heaviest Moments

15 Stories That Prove the Universe Has a Beautiful Way of Rewarding Good Hearts

I Refused to Buy My Stepson a Christmas Gift—He’s Not My Family

19 Teachers Whose Kindness and Patience Deserve a Standing Ovation

I Refused to Obey My DIL’s Weird Demands, I’m a MIL, Not an Errand Girl

My Vegan Meal on a Flight Caused a Scene, but I Got the Last Laugh

I Found the Nanny Putting My Granddaughter at Risk, Yet My DIL Sees Me as the Enemy

I Refuse to Share My Son’s Grief Money With My Mother-in-Law

I Refuse to Let My DIL Treat My Home Like a Free Pantry

10 Moments When Kindness Was the Ultimate Power Move

I Walked Out of the Family Reunion After My Stepdaughter Handed Me a List of “Rules”

I Refused to Give Up My Extra Plane Seat to a Kid — Things Escalated Quickly



