YES.leave there when you get another opportunity.Thwy will see what she is really like .A better paying job will be out there for yoy.Your boss will be begging for you to come back!
I Refuse to Report to Someone I Trained, So I Turned the Tables

We want to be generous with our knowledge at work. But generosity has limits — especially when it gets used against you. One woman trained her replacement without even knowing it. When the truth hit her, she made a quiet decision that changed everything.
Megan’s letter:

Hi Bright Side,
I trained the new hire for 6 months. Yesterday, they promoted her above me. She smirked and whispered, “Guess the student became the master.”
I stayed calm. I didn’t react. I just nodded and went back to my desk.
This morning, her face went gray when she finally realized I’d actually been secretly documenting every single process, shortcut, and client contact that only I knew. Things I never had time to fully teach her. Things that weren’t written down anywhere else.
Now she’s struggling in meetings, fumbling through tasks, and calling me every 10 minutes asking how things work. I answer politely, but only with the basics. Nothing extra. Nothing that makes her look good.
My manager pulled me aside and asked why the new team lead seems so “unprepared.” I just shrugged and said, “I’m sure she’ll figure it out. She’s the master now, right?”
Some coworkers think I’m being petty. Others say I’m just protecting my value. My sister thinks I should have quit on the spot. My best friend says I’m playing it perfectly.
But honestly, I don’t know how to feel anymore. Part of me is proud for standing my ground, but another part feels like maybe I’m being too cold.
Should I keep doing the bare minimum or try to rebuild some kind of working relationship with her? Is it wrong that I feel satisfaction watching her struggle? Am I hurting my own career by not being a team player right now?
I keep going back and forth and I really need someone outside this mess to tell me what they honestly think.
Yours,
Megan
Thank you, Megan, for being so open about such a frustrating situation. We completely understand how painful it is to feel overlooked after giving so much of yourself. Here is our advice to help you navigate this chapter and decide what’s best for your future.

If you do leave, whether by choice or not, take everything with you. Let them figure it out. Why should they benefit from your work?
The term "Team Player" is used by administrators to shame you. They will turn on you in a minute, and think nothing of it.
You definitely did the right thing by standing your ground by protecting yourself. Clearly and apparently this new hire thinks she's "all that and a bag of chips" if you will. All because you tried to help her and she treated you very badly. Pull up your resume and start looking for a new job elsewhere. You definitely deserve so much better than that. Your company also treated you very badly as well. You should definitely go somewhere else where you will be appreciated just for being there. Know your worth
What career? They have made their position for you clear with this hire and promotion. Dust off that resume.
Holy moly, why do people put up with this stuff from their employers. So happy I do not have to deal with this crap anymore.
This person doesn't seem to appreciate all the help you've given her before the promotion. She was so smugged earlier, I'd say let her get humbled.
You did it correctly. You are not responsible for new trainee after her promotion.
I think you should sharpen up your resume and start applying for jobs that will pay you what you're worth. Get your next job before you quit. She made the fatal mistake of disrespecting you. And the people who promoted her above you also disrespected you. So get a new job and walk out of that building with all of that extra knowledge still in your brain. It will pay off for the next company.
Somebody made a mistake, promoting the wrong person. Make whomever made the mistake pay. It isn't her fault. If she deserves help, then help her. If not, then don't help her.
Stand Your Ground!
You absolutely are doing the right thing!!
You are quite correct ..do NOT HELP THIS PERSON ..question ...were you paid for her training. You are under no obligation to continue to assist her ..if she doesn't know something ..then she's unfit for that roll .DO NOT GIVE IN ...YOU ARE NOT WRONG ..DO NOT SECOND GUESS YOURSELF ..STAY FIRM ...
Perfect response
Everyone has already said it, let her drown
Your Wisdom and knowledge isn't a free gift to someone else. what it makes is money and your future. Knowledge is power
Your boss clearly does not recognize your skills or value; start looking for a new job.
It's obvious they don't value you. I'd leave and take all that knowledge with you. If the "master" wants to master let her do it on her own.
It's time for her to sink or swim
You are doing great. Let her struggle. She's the master right?
She's the master let her figure it out herself next time she calls tell her that
The 2nd they promoted her over you I would have looked for a new job. I wouldn't help her I would let her sink.
She's the master. Let her figure it out. Just do the job you are being paid for.
Keep slamming her until she get fired, if she don't put value to you, do the same to her. An eye 👁️ for an eye 👁️, a teeth 🦷 for a teeth 🦷
Your knowledge is your currency — spend it wisely. You earned everything you know through years of hard work and experience. Giving it away for free to someone who dismissed you isn’t generosity — it’s self-sabotage. Stay professional, but remember that your expertise has value. You don’t owe anyone a masterclass they didn’t earn.
Let her struggle just enough. There’s a difference between sabotage and simply not overextending yourself. You’re not blocking her success — you’re just no longer carrying her. Let her find her footing on her own while you focus on your own tasks. Growth often comes from struggle, and that’s her journey now.
That smirk told you everything you needed to know. People reveal themselves in small moments. Her comment wasn’t playful — it was a power move meant to put you in your place. You don’t have to hold a grudge, but you also don’t have to forget. Let it guide how much energy you invest in this relationship going forward.
Watch for new doors opening. Sometimes the worst moments at work lead to the best opportunities. Keep your eyes open for internal transfers, new roles, or outside offers that match your worth. This chapter doesn’t define your career — it’s just one page in a much longer story.
Workplace drama can leave us drained, but sometimes kindness shows up right when we need it most. If Megan’s story hit home, you’ll love these 15 moments where kindness won when everything else fell apart.
Comments
Sweetie pea. They are slowly moving on without you. Its waay past time to put in your two weeks and be done with it. All their trying to do now is get some more free training out of you before you go
I wish we got updates.
When you leave take your knowledge with you. Let them learn it for themselves. And let them find out how valuable you were.
Where is i am from what you post online can and will be used in court even in employment situations. Meaning if you admitted to being petty which you have, HR can fire you just cause (no severance - we initial our hire packages which include behaviors such as these) and if employee tries to sue, if they have copies of what is posted the judge will say hurt feelings are not a legal matter
Rachel Kwrt is not very smart if she would have posted anything under her own name. Her comment shows she would not have the sense to post on a burner account.
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