I Refused to Train My New Colleague for Free, I’m Not a Charity

People
2 months ago
I Refused to Train My New Colleague for Free, I’m Not a Charity

Workplace expectations can quickly cross the line when loyalty is treated as availability, and experience becomes an excuse to demand more. Many long-term employees end up carrying extra responsibilities simply because they’ve “always stepped up.” One reader wrote in after refusing unpaid extra work — and said it instantly shifted how she was treated at the office.

The letter:

Dear Bright Side,

I (39 F) have worked on the marketing team for 10 years.

Recently, our firm decided to expand the team with some “young perspective.” They took in a 24-year-old recent graduate named Mia, who has zero experience. None.

My boss told me to stay an extra hour daily to train her.
I replied, “I don’t do free work. I’m not a charity!” He snapped, “We’re a family, not everything
is about money! Plus, you will have less work to do once Mia is fully trained. This is for your own good!”

I smiled and nodded politely.

Next day, everyone went numb when they discovered I had been planning to leave. I had already cleaned my office and placed all of Mia’s stuff in it. I took her small desk.

My boss looked confused. I said, “Since you hired Mia to take some of my workload, I’m happy to give her all of it. I’m leaving.” Then I gave him my two weeks’ notice.

I’ve accepted a new job that respects my time, and I don’t want to stay in a workplace that expects unpaid effort.

HR asked to meet with me to try to convince me to stay. They said they value their senior employees, and that I’m considered one of their most important assets.

Now I’m starting to second-guess myself. I’ve been with this company for 10 years, and I don’t want to make a decision I’ll regret.

Am I wrong for leaving?

Sincerely,
Meredith

AI generated image

Leaving is the right decision; your boss does not respect or value you and never will!

Reply

Any employer will miss you for about one second. Then hire your replacement. Need to look out for yourself. Make them PAY, ask for a raise.

Reply

You did right thing . You have your rights and wasn't Mia too young for a job .

Reply

That "family" talk is only for guilt. They don't care about you!
They only care what you can give them!

Reply

Nope. They were planning on getting rid of you once you trained her. HR isn't on your side, within a few months you'd be gone. They're just mad you beat them to it. Enjoy your new job.

Reply

Did they ask you if you needed help ? If not, you're doing the right thing by leaving as they were slowly pushing you out the door. Enjoy your new adventure

Reply

Should have reiterated to the boss "I don't work for free, because I need money to pay my bills, I dare you to NOT pay your bills and car insurance and house without money 😤"

Reply

If you take the new job you have to start everything from scratch, you have to earn that trust again but staying there is not a harm if you do something good for someone the god will definitely see that even if that person don't remember he will cuz not everything is about money but values and who knows that you might need help someday and have to suffer that same thing again so think wisely.

Reply

Don't second guess yourself. Why would they expect you to work for free? Would they pay you to sit home and do nothing?you need to leave there.You did the right thing. You were gonna be out the door anyway, they were probably gonna have a restructuring. They always bring up the family nonsense to try to guilt people into doing anything.Don't buy into it

Reply

Tell them you'll stay as long as they pay you when you stay past your time it's not reasonable and it's only fair! You are providing them a service in exchange for money it's in your employee contract and don't feel guilty!

Reply

Stop nagging and do the extra work Meredith! Having a job means to sacrifice your time sometimes, even if it is free

Reply

So you’re working for free? That’s never been rewarded in my 45+ years of working. Usually when you’re asked to train someone, they were hired to replace you.
My husband saw the writing on the wall and put his resume out while he was recovering from surgery. The day he was released to go back was on a Thursday and he was to go back on the following Monday. He drove 6 hours for a job interview where they offered enough money and compensation that I wouldn’t have to work anymore. (My health was getting bad enough I was trying to figure out how to work fewer hours, but in a school that wasn’t possible). When the big boss found out by my husband’s best friend that I wasn’t having to work, he was shocked. Now 14 years later that boss, along with about 10 more employees made the move to the same company as my husband. The big boss is now part owner in the new company. Best thing we ever did.

Reply

Forced to do unpaid overtime? Really? Where I live the government and unions would have this company in court very quickly. And it would cost them, not just in fines but in back pay for everyone else they have done it to.

Reply

Some companies value education over experience! KNOW YOUR WORTH! Every job I ever worked I learned everything I could, Took that experience with me. In 45 years I've only been out of work 2 weeks! I'm currently on my 25th anniversary and adding to my 2nd pension!

Reply

If you have a new opportunity take it. After ten years of your efforts and loyalty not only were you expected to do free labor, but you were scolded for not complying.

Reply

Where were hr when she needed them ...that's a question shouldn't hr have checked the newbies credentials ..you don't hire someone who has no idea of the job ..could the newbie be a relative of someone high up in management .

Reply

I also work for almost 10 years for 1 company and it’s a shame we are always underestimated. We store the most necessary experience and knowledge, no company’s database has

Reply

Thank you for sharing your story, Meredith. After 10 years of loyalty and hard work, it’s completely normal to feel conflicted — especially when leaving feels sudden. But this likely wasn’t about one request. It sounds like the result of years of effort that wasn’t truly valued. Here’s our advice:

You didn’t act on emotion — you acted on evidence

You were training your younger, cheaper replacement. Fact. That's how it works in the real world. It's usually just business. Sometimes it gets personal. Treat it as business. Don't doubt yourself. Take this new gig and run with it

Reply

Your boss wasn’t asking for support; he was expecting unpaid work while brushing off your experience. It wasn’t a one-time jab; it exposed how little your long-term dedication was truly respected.

Leaving wasn’t impulsive — it was a smart, professional move to protect your value. Staying would’ve signaled that free extra labor is acceptable, and that would only open the door to more exploitation.

If you consider staying, demand a written agreement — not verbal promises

Your boss was breaking the law. Employees are not to work off the clock. Don't trust him or the company. HR should have written him up for trying to get you to work without getting paid.

Reply

If they truly want you to stay, they need to prove it with more than compliments. Words like “we need you” don’t mean much without real change.

Push for a written offer: better pay, protected work hours, and clear limits on additional duties like training others. If they dodge that conversation, you’ve already learned where you stand. Your value should be paid for — not assumed.

Don’t let guilt distort what really happened

Unfortunately when it comes to salaried workers, drawing that hard line in the sand gets more difficult. Now with the age of WFH it's even more mushy, add cell phones, iPad etc. When aren't workers not available to work.

Reply

After 10 years, it’s natural to feel attached — but commitment has to be mutual. Your boss framed it as “teamwork” to pressure you into giving away your time.

Real leadership would’ve recognized your mentorship and compensated it, not treated your evenings as theirs to claim. Leaving a one-sided situation isn’t disloyalty — it’s knowing your worth.

Use this as your reset: set clear boundaries in your next role from day one

You’ve seen how being the “go-to person” can quickly turn into being taken for granted.

In your next role, be clear early about workload boundaries and what support or mentoring you’re willing to provide. It sets the tone that your expertise is worth respecting — and that your experience doesn’t mean you’re on call 24/7.

When life feels overwhelming, even the smallest kindness can be enough to help us breathe again. Here are 15 powerful stories that prove compassion, even in quiet moments, can change everything.

Comments

Get notifications

Boss: We need you to stay late every day to train the new employee.

Meredith: Okay, boss. Please let me know how you want me to code my overtime for Payroll.

B: There is no overtime available.

M: Then please let me know what to deprioritize from my workload so that I can train our new person during my regularly scheduled hours.

Still might have resulted in quitting, but it was a more professional response when telling her boss no. 🤷🏻‍♀️

Reply

I don't get all these people who expect paychecks at the end of the month, yet they are not ready to do any small sacrifice for their job. Having a job is not always perfect sometimes you gotta go the extra mile, even if it means to give your time without expecting so much in return

Reply

If HR agrees to some of your demands for compensation, I would stay cause 10 more years and a pension comes when you retire

Reply

Related Reads