The Desk That Never Let Her Leave
The Desk That Never Let Her Leave Every morning, Anaya reached her desk before the lights came on. Not because she was early—but because she was afraid to be late. Her manager never shouted. He smiled. A soft, polite smile that hid sharper weapons: impossible deadlines, public “feedback,” emails sent at 2 a.m. marked URGENT. When targets were missed, he said, “Maybe you’re not cut out for this,” loud enough for others to hear, quiet enough to deny later. Lunch breaks disappeared. Sick days became “commitment issues.” Praise was dangled like a reward she could almost touch—but never earn. Slowly, Anaya stopped speaking in meetings. Stopped sleeping. Stopped recognizing the confident person she once was. The torture wasn’t physical. It was cleaner than that. It lived in constant fear—of losing her job, her dignity, her sense of worth. One evening, staring at her reflection in the dark monitor, she realized the truth: the company didn’t own her time anymore. It had taken her v...