AITA for refusing to give up my Christmas leave for a colleague who has kids?
The workplace holiday schedule turned into a battleground when a parent asked a childless co-worker to waive her approved leave so she could extend her Christmas break with her kids. The office was closed until early January, requiring additional days to be requested in advance. Four of the six employees, including the poster, requested leave until the 8th; one did not request it at all.
The co-worker who was passed over later pleaded with managers for the same amount of time, citing family reasons, and was told that only a replacement could be offered. Complicating matters further was her passive-aggressive email that made the poster feel guilty for not having children, followed by office-wide complaints that the refusal had ruined her plans.

‘AITA for refusing to give up my Christmas leave for a colleague who has kids?’
Office sets clear holiday leave rules, splitting the break into mandatory closure and optional extensions.


Most follow protocol and lock in extended vacations, while one skips the extra step.

Late requester pivots to emotional appeals and targets a peer for a forced swap.




Vacation entitlements explode when parents use “family” to bypass fair systems, exposing deep-seated biases against childless workers. Colleagues who apply late and are publicly shamed violate a basic principle of professionalism—leave is not a popularity contest. Managers allow late swaps, rewarding those who are disorganized and penalizing those who plan. What complicates the story is subtle discrimination: the implication that childless plans are less important.
Counterarguments argue that parents deserve priority for child-friendly vacations, but current policy prevents exactly this hierarchy. Fairness requires first-come, first-served.
HR experts warn that such behavior creates a dangerously hostile environment. As SHRM contributor Johnny C. Taylor Jr. puts it, “Parenthood is not federally protected in the United States, but targeting childless employees for adverse treatment can still violate anti-discrimination policies” (source: SHRM.org). Clear rules and early filing will keep the peace; but accusations will destroy the peace.
Let’s dive into the reactions from Reddit:
Many users brand the colleague entitled, urging HR reports and firm boundaries against parent-priority myths.

![[Reddit User] − No. What you respond with is: "I'm sorry you feel that way. Next time put in for leave in advance like everyone else - your lack of...](https://en.aubtu.biz/wp-content/uploads/2025/11/wp-editor-1762153221257-2.webp)






Others reframe family broadly and flag managerial missteps that sparked the drama.




A couple inject sarcasm or petty tactics while reinforcing the no-guilt stance.




Approved leave isn’t a bargaining chip for better planners to yield to latecomers waving the parent card. The colleague’s email and gossip campaign turned personal failure into public persecution. Systems exist for fairness; guilt shouldn’t override them.
Should workplaces ban post-deadline swaps entirely to avoid this drama? Do child-free employees owe flexibility to parents, or does that breed resentment? Have you faced “family first” pressure at work, and how did you push back?
