This is why you don't wed on Valentines Day. Not every job gives people off for such a non holiday.
I Refused to Answer a Work Text on My Day Off—It Cost Me a Promotion and My Career “Success”

Career success is usually the goal we’re chasing, but sometimes the price tag is hidden until you’re already halfway up the ladder. For one person who had spent years being the reliable employee who always said “yes,” that price finally became clear. After years of hitting every target and staying late, a simple request for a Valentine’s Day anniversary off was met with a blunt reality check.
Benjamin is torn between protecting his personal life and risking his career success.

Hi Bright Side team,
I’ve been at my company for a few years now, always reliable, always hitting targets, always the employee who says yes. So when our first anniversary with my partner lined up with Valentine’s Day, I requested that day off months ahead. It meant a lot to both of us.
Then my boss blocked it. No discussion, no explanation. Just a calendar update and a comment that honestly stunned me.
He said, “Your career should be your only love. Personal lives are for people who don’t want promotions and success.” I laughed it off at the time because... what else do you even say to that?
But it stuck with me.
The next day, while checking some internal docs, I quietly found something interesting. The promotion pipeline everyone keeps talking about seemed less about performance metrics and more about who stays constantly available, who answers late-night messages, who basically lives for the office. That realization hit hard.
So on Valentine’s Day, I didn’t check work texts. Not once. I focused on my anniversary, on real life.
The next week, I learned I was no longer being considered for the promotion I’d been informally promised. The feedback was vague but clear enough: “commitment perception,” “availability concerns,” things like that.
I’m torn. I don’t know what to do.
Part of me thinks I protected something way more important than a job title. Another part wonders if I hurt my long-term career over one day.
So I wanted to ask you all: was I wrong to ignore that work message on Valentine’s Day? Is career success supposed to come at the cost of personal life, or did I make the right call?
—Benjamin
Dear readers, what’s your take on this workplace dilemma about career success vs. personal life? Was ignoring work messages on Valentine’s Day anniversary a smart move for work-life balance, or a risky choice that could hurt career growth and promotion chances? If you were in that situation, would you prioritize your relationship milestone or stay available for job expectations? We’d love to hear how you’d handle it. Let us know in the comments.
- Next article to read: 12 Moments Where Empathy Showed the Power of a Kind Heart
Comments
Another post where boss's think their employees lives should revolve around work. I wonder if hes even married. Either way I'd quit as the job or the boss in this case, is too toxic.
the boss is totally right in this story
Exactly girls
yeah, the victim here is the boss

All i know is that yoir boss doesnt owe you anything
yes yes yes
You aren't wrong, but you are fighting an already established office culture. A toxic one, yes, but the best move here is probably to update your resume and start quietly looking elsewhere for employment. Chances are if they decide they have to cut employment numbers, you will be on the shortlist anyways now. There's an unspoken agreement that you aren't a good fit. You can find an employer that won't consider it an offense to ask for time off every once in a while.
if the office culture is gone, nothing can bring it back. Have you watched the TV series called “Industry?” almost the same thing happened there
You only get one chance at life, make fun, loving memories not Staglag 13 decisions.
why 1 chance? every day is a chance
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