Our company has oncall paging duty for one week rotating among all team members. No overtime pay. I don't think it is unusual
I Refuse to Work Weekends for Free—Now HR Is Building a Case

Workplaces love to praise dedication, but sometimes that word feels like a trap. People are expected to sacrifice rest, family, and their personal time like it’s part of the job description. Most stay quiet because speaking up feels risky. But everything changes the moment someone decides enough is enough. One reader shared a moment that made her rethink what loyalty really means.
Jenna’s letter:

Hi, Bright Side,
My boss texts the team every Sunday with Monday prep work. Everyone completes it unpaid. I ignore it.
Yesterday he wrote, “Your silence is noted.” I replied, “So is unpaid work.” He didn’t answer at first.
Then he wrote, “This is unacceptable.” I responded, “Pay me first.” He stayed silent.
The next morning, everyone in the office froze when they discovered I’d been secretly scheduling my emails to send on Monday mornings instead of replying on weekends. HR called me in and said they were “building a pattern of refusal” and documenting my behavior.
It suddenly felt like I was being treated as the difficult one just for protecting my own time. My boss walked past my desk with this chilly smile, like he expected me to regret it. But honestly, I felt strangely proud for sticking to my values.
Still, part of me keeps second-guessing everything. I just don’t want to feel guilty or difficult for refusing unpaid weekend work.
I really need advice from anyone who has gone through something similar or knows how to stay calm in moments like this.
Please help,
Jenna
Thank you, Jenna, for sharing something so personal and frustrating. Many people reading this will see parts of themselves in your situation. We hope our thoughts bring you clarity, calm, and confidence.

Put in overtime for the work done or take time off in lieu.
A calm “no” is more powerful than a stressed “yes.” Sometimes staying firm quietly teaches people more than long explanations. You don’t need to argue or convince anyone. Calm choices often feel stronger than emotional ones. Keep your energy steady and let your boundaries stay clear.
Don’t apologize for your boundaries. Apologizing makes your decision sound like something you should feel sorry for. Saying “no” is part of being a person, not a problem. Your time belongs to you first. You deserve room to live your life.
Let your quiet actions speak for you. Sometimes small choices send the message better than any speech. Your scheduled Monday emails already show your limits without being dramatic. People notice even if they pretend not to. Let your actions do the explaining for you.

Are you in a Union, if not, get one. Simple.
People sometimes forget you have a life outside the office. Work can make others think you’re available all the time. You’re gently reminding them that weekends belong to you. That’s not being difficult. It’s being human.
If you want another story about someone quietly standing up for themselves at work, this one will make you smile. Sometimes the calmest decisions end up changing everything. 👉 My Coworker Stole My Promotion, but I Was Already Three Steps Ahead
Comments
When we were young and wanted to build the career we never asked a question. You think I never answered emails on weekends? Never did extra work? i just remembered I need to have my bills paid
.... Yeah most people dont condone breaking the laws.
And not asking questions isnt the flex you think it is
Back then we didnt have the rights we do now. There wasnt much of a comeback and employers often took advantage of that.
Im glad things are improving and employees have better rights.
So, you're saying that they were able to make you work off the clock even though you were hourly and you couldn't sue just because it's a right to work state? And therefore, your lawyer or Department of Labor couldn't do anything? So, we really had no rights as an employee?
Doesn't make it right
And your situation is the reason there are laws that protect employees from being taken advantage of by employers who assume you NEED the job so you'll do what it takes to keep it, including working for free.
I worked 70 - 80 hrs a week but I got paid time and a half for anything over 40! I asked a lot of questions because I wanted to move up and you don't learn if you stand around like a wallflower! I became one of the youngest Produce mangers with the company because I didn't want to be quiet and I wanted to make money. I moved up to Asst Store Mgr from there. Then at 24 I changed careers completely and retired at 50 as a lieutenant after 25 years ss a c/o. Never kept my mouth shut and head down there either! Your way is not the only way, especially for women!
Just because you did doesn't make it right. Remember at one point slavery was legal
They have labor laws for a reason, we aren't building our careers in 1975 and things like this don't have to be taken quietly in fear of losing your job anymore. You may be old but times have changed.
All those who work for a company and getting a call on a weekend to do extra work outside of work without pay, is considered illegal, you can file a complaint with the labor board also known As Labor commission. Document everything. Days worked and conversations, text anything specifying a conversation.
I never worked for free!
I have been an hourly and salaried employee, I have also been a VP of the company I worked at.
To do work unpaid is not lawful especially if you are an hourly employee, the boss was out of line to request such a thing especially over the weekend, that's your time.
So for those that aligned themselves with the bosses request you're wrong and maybe you should check your own backbone.
As for the boss, if you want your staff to do prep work on their time off, ask first and offer a pay incentive, otherwise your out of line.
Especially when you're an hourly employee, by law you should get paid for any work you do, or recieve comp time.
Exactly!
Great idea, pay incentive
Always remember HR is NOT on your side. The best thing to do if Hr gets involved instantly looking for another job because you are on the chopping block
And cave so they keep all thee employees in fear! I don't think so. You get any communication in writing from them! Go to the Labor board or a good labor attorney!
HR not on your side? That's rediculous; HR is there to mitigate risk to the business and that includes management as well as employees. Everyone has to adhere to the local workplace legislation and work together to create the work culture that you want.
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