I totally get your stress. Trying to deal with a dying parent is something you can NEVER prepare for. I lost mine to cancer and she was one of those people that just never got sick. She didn't last a year and losing her was like losing part of myself. She raised me as a single mom and always made sure I never did without. Still miss her to this day and I guess I always will. 😔
I Refused to Knit My Coworker a Free Blanket, and Now HR Is Involved

Workplaces have a strange way of blurring personal boundaries, especially when kindness and empathy (along with compassion, yes) turn into entitlement. What started as a quiet side hustle to help cover medical bills suddenly became an office power play. And it all escalated faster than anyone expected.
Hermione’s letter:
Hey, Bright Side,
I knit at work during breaks and quiet moments to help pay for my mom’s medical bills. It is not a hobby project or a cute pastime. It is survival.
My coworker Sarah noticed and casually asked if I could make her a blanket. I explained politely that it takes about five months to finish one and the yarn alone costs around $200. I told her I simply could not do it for free.
She smiled, but it was cold. She said, “We’ll see about that...” And added something under her nose that sounded like, “I hope your mother dies before you finish that blanket.” What an odd thing to say!!
The next day, my boss called me into his office. My stomach dropped. I honestly thought I was about to be written up or fired.
He told me Sarah had complained that I was “running a business at work” and “refusing to be a team player.” I froze.
Then I calmly explained everything. The medical bills. The cost of materials. The fact that I never sell to coworkers and never knit on company time.
My boss went quiet. Then he asked one question that changed everything. “Did she ask you for free work?” When I said yes, his entire tone shifted. He told me I was not in trouble and that what Sarah did was inappropriate.
Later that day, HR sent out a reminder about pressuring coworkers for unpaid work and personal favors. Sarah has not spoken to me since.
So, Bright Side, what do you think? Did I go too far by telling the truth about Sarah?
Hermione
Your survival skills are not office freebies.

Thank you, Hermione, for sharing your story with us. It is incredibly moving to hear how hard you are working to support your mother. Using your talent to provide for your family is honorable, and it is heartbreaking that a colleague tried to weaponize your struggle against you.
- Hermione, just because something looks creative or calming does not mean it has no value. Time, skill, and materials all cost real money. You never owe free labor to anyone, especially when that labor supports something as serious as medical care.
- You explained yourself clearly and respectfully. That was more than enough. Anyone who reacts badly to a reasonable boundary is revealing their own entitlement, not your lack of kindness.
Protect your energy when you are already carrying enough.
- “That smile” and vague threats are meant to scare you into compliance. They only work if you stay quiet. Calm facts and honesty often dismantle manipulation faster than anger ever could.
- What your coworker did was not a misunderstanding. It was pressure. Managers and HR need to know when employees are being coerced into unpaid work, so patterns do not continue unchecked.
- Release the Guilt: You didn’t "get Sarah in trouble"—Sarah’s own actions did. She attempted to use your boss to bully you into providing free labor. Reporting the facts was a necessary act of self-defense, not an act of aggression.
- Maintain Professional Distance: Since Sarah has stopped speaking to you, use this as a “gift of silence.” Keep your interactions strictly work-related and polite. You don’t need to apologize for her discomfort; her silence is a natural consequence of her behavior.
- Document Everything: Even though the boss and HR are on your side, keep a brief log of your knitting times (e.g., “12:00–12:30 PM: Lunch break”) and any further interactions with Sarah. If she tries to claim you are working on company time again, you will have a clear paper trail of your innocence.
- Lean on Your Support System: You are going through a lot with your mom’s medical bills. Don’t let this workplace drama drain the emotional energy you need for your family. Focus on the coworkers who didn’t try to take advantage of you.

You find pricks like Sarah on all jobs and they also comes in the form of friends, females and males.
- Keep Your Workspace “Neutral”: To avoid giving anyone else “ammunition,” ensure your yarn and projects are tucked away in a bag or drawer when you aren’t on your official break. This keeps a clear physical boundary between your “survival work” and your “office work.”
Next article: I Refuse to Work Three Unpaid Weekends to Prove Loyalty — HR Got Involved
Comments
Sweetheart, you don’t owe cruel people softness. What Sarah said was disgusting. You stood up for yourself and your mom. I’m proud of you.
just knit one for free, no big deal
Thought I would take a while off from commenting, but when I saw YOUR INANE COMMENT, I HAD TO SAY SOMETHING. WHAT part of 5 months to finish, AND $200.00 in materials, do you think is NO BIG DEAL? OR FREE? DO YOU REALLY NEED SOMEONE TO RELATE TO, SO BADLY, THAT YOU WOULD CONTINUALLY PUT YOUR IGNORANCE ON DISPLAY, OVER, AND OVER, AND OVER, AGAIN?
Are you serious.. is that what you would do to someone that said that about your Mom.. she should have to pay 10 times the cost..
Are you for real, 5 months and a cost of 200 dollars. I'm sure you would spend the time and money yourself, moron.
So you are a Sarah. Entitled bitches
As a crocheter, it takes a very long time to make a blanket. Yarn can cost upwards of $300, especially if you use higher quality yarn. That time and money could be used to make items they can sell for money for their mother's bills. If you feel the coworker deserves a free blanket, knit one yourself, no big deal, right?
Maybe no big deal for you!! The yarn costs a lot of money and knitting and crocheting takes a lot of time, both of which you must have plenty of for you to think she should do one for free instead of charging. That is major entitlement of the recipient!!
Knit one for free? Why isn't $800-$1,400 a big deal to you? $200 for the wool, $600-$1,200 forgone for six months of knitting, because whilst she's knitting the free blanket for Sarah, she doesn't have time to knit the blanket, which she can sell. You know, for her mother's medical bills...
Did you miss the parts about the yarn costing 200$-or that it takes 5 months to make one or how about the part when she mentioned earning the money for HER OWN MOTHERS MEDICAL BILLS?
Sarah is an entitled vindictive b****. Say as far away from her as you possibly can. You're a good person. UYou don't deserve that drama in your life.
nah, she just asked for a small thing, the OP made a whole drama
WHAT SMALL THING? 5 MONTHS OF HER TIME, AND SEVERAL HUNDRED DOLLARS, OF HER MONEY IS NOT SOMETHING THAT ANYONE WITH A BRAIN WOULD "GIVE AWAY"!
No, little miss entitled did by demanding a free blanket then when she didn't get her way, she reported her. She is not entitled to a free homemade blanket that takes months and is very expensive. Besides she told her that she hoped her mom dies which is sick and cruel.
So if its a small thing please give me all the yarn needed for a blanket.
Also don't forget she's the one who reported to HR first
And SHOULD HAVE BEEN FIRED, for trying to pressure an already overwhelmed coworker.
It's wild that we live in a world where people think telling the truth is going to far. Seriously. "OMG I told the truth am I horrible person?"
NO! WTFF
When you consider how many of these stories bring up being cut off, or blamed for something, BECAUSE they told the truth, you can understand WHY they asked.
It's wild to live in a country where you have to have a side hustle to pay for medical bills! My partner had an accident in October - an open pison fracture if you want to Google it. He's had 8 surgeries so far, still has a metal frame on his leg pinning everything into place and has 2 hospital appointments a week which includes a specialist ambulance crew there and back to get him up and down the stairs. After research, I realised we'd be in medical debt that would pass to his daughters if we lived in the United States. Fortunately we're English so haven't paid a penny - not even for the air ambulance getting him to hospital!
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