Constant group chat vs 30 - 45 minutes once a week? I think they should all be high fiving her.
I Refused to Reply to Work Messages After 8 P.M.—Now HR Got Involved

With the rise of remote work and “always-on” culture, more people are struggling to keep real work-life boundaries. Constant notifications, late-night messages, and pressure to reply fast are driving burnout and workplace stress. One reader recently wrote to us with her own experience — and it’s something many will relate to.
The letter:
Dear Bright Side,
My boss texts our group chat past 8 p.m. almost every night—feedback, tasks, random questions. Everyone always replies. I never do.
Last Friday, he tagged me directly. I responded, “You don’t own me 24/7.” He just sent a 👍.
Monday morning, 8 a.m., we all froze when we found an email from HR. It said, “No work messages would be sent outside office hours anymore. The group chat was being shut down.
Instead, every employee would now have to stay 30 to 45 minutes after work once a week for in-person performance reviews.”
HR called it a way to “respect our personal time.”
Everyone stared at me when they found out I’d been clearly named as the reason for the change.
I was just trying to protect our boundaries, but overnight I became the office villain. People who used to chat with me now barely make eye contact.
Did I do the wrong thing by pushing back?
How do I fix this now?
Sincerely,
— Leena

Thank you, Leena, for trusting us with your story. It’s clear this has been weighing on you, and we don’t take that lightly. You’re far from alone in dealing with something like this, and we have practical advice to help you figure out your next steps.
Mentally reframe what happened
Talk to one or two coworkers you trust and clear it up simply: you weren’t trying to extend anyone’s hours — you were trying to stop the late-night critiques from your boss.
Don’t argue or get defensive. Just acknowledge the outcome wasn’t what you expected, so people see this as a workplace issue that HR mishandled, not something you did to them.
Offer HR a workable solution
Ask HR for a brief, neutral meeting — not to vent, but to suggest a better policy that stops after-hours messages without forcing people to stay late.
For example, set one rotating feedback slot per employee during normal hours.
Mention that performance notes were coming in around 8 p.m or later, which made them feel urgent and intrusive. Offering a practical alternative gives HR room to adjust without feeling attacked.
Use light humor to ease the tension
At your next normal team moment, try a brief, self-aware joke like, “I definitely wasn’t trying to swap 8 p.m. messages for forced overtime.”
It acknowledges the awkwardness without throwing yourself under the bus. You show you get why people are frustrated, while making it clear the outcome wasn’t what you wanted. A touch of gentle humor can ease the tension and help everyone move forward.
Redirect attention to the real problem

Well, no. They can review my functioning during working hours, not on my time.
Explain what you mean please. 🤔🤔🤔🤔
If your boss seems receptive, have a short, matter-of-fact conversation about the real issue: feedback sent in the evenings comes across as urgent criticism and hurts team morale.
Make it clear this wasn’t about pushing back personally, but about keeping boundaries around work time. By calmly naming the behavior that needed to change — the late-night feedback — you shift attention away from yourself and back to the core problem.
Paula is facing a different kind of workplace pressure. While she was off the clock, she was unexpectedly told to come in for an urgent meeting with a major client. She said no — and the fallout caught her off guard.
Comments
So your coworkers are essentially mad at you because you got them a half hour of paid extra work time a week, as opposed to them being on call for free 24 hours a day?
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