After years of showing up and doing my job, I ended up on the wrong side of a workforce reduction.
I keep replaying it in my head and I still don’t understand why it was me. I wasn’t the one on the team copying and pasting content from free tech newsletters and calling it “training strategy.” I wasn’t the one disappearing into medical leave for half the year. I was the one quietly carrying my load, triple‑checking my work and trying to be a decent teammate.
So when they said my role was being eliminated, it hit me like a truck. My first reaction was: why me and not them? What did I do wrong? Was I too quiet? Too direct? Not political enough? Not fake enough? It’s hard not to internalize it and feel like I must have missed some secret rulebook everyone else was reading from.
On top of that, I’m wrestling with the feeling that some of my coworkers were not just unhelpful, but actively backstabbing. People who smiled in my face, pretended to be friends and then somehow managed to come out untouched while I was the one cut. It makes me question my own judgment about who to trust and whether being straightforward and honest actually works in corporate environments that reward fake over effort.
Right now my confidence is pretty shaken. I feel unsure of myself and my choices, and I am angry that people who contributed far less are still there.
I’m sharing this here because I know I can’t be the only one who feels blindsided, replaced, and somehow made to feel like the problem when they did everything “right.” I’m trying to sit with the confusion and the grief without sugarcoating it, and also remind myself that being ethical, reliable, and real is not a weakness even if it didn’t protect my job.
If you’ve ever wondered “Why me?” while watching less‑committed people keep their seats, you’re not alone. I’m still figuring out what’s next, but for now I just needed to say this out loud, without pretending it’s all “bittersweet” and “for the best” when it mostly just hurts!