I Thought I Was Supporting A Coworker In Need, But A Group Chat Message Revealed The Real Reason Behind Her Ridiculous Demands

My coworker asked me to contribute to her babyโ€™s 1-year anniversary. I was honored, initially, because Iโ€™ve always been the type of person who likes to show up for people. We worked together at a busy architectural firm in Manchester, and Iโ€™d seen Sandra navigate her pregnancy with a lot of grit. When she approached me at the coffee station, looking a bit tired but hopeful, I genuinely wanted to help celebrate her daughterโ€™s first major milestone.

I told her, โ€œOf course, Sandra, Iโ€™d love to help out in some way. Just let me know what you need.โ€ I figured maybe Iโ€™d pick up a cake, grab a cute outfit from the shops, or chip in twenty quid for the decorations. Itโ€™s what you do for people you spend forty hours a week with, especially when theyโ€™re struggling to balance a career and a baby. I went back to my desk feeling that little glow you get from being a decent human being.

I was honored, until she sent a list later that afternoon via email. My jaw practically hit my keyboard when I saw the โ€œcontributionโ€ she was expecting from me. It wasnโ€™t a cake or a card; she was expecting a custom-made oak crib item that cost nearly four hundred pounds, plus a significant portion of the catering costs for a venue sheโ€™d booked in the city. The total she was asking me for was upwards of six hundred pounds, which is a massive chunk of my monthly mortgage payment.

I stared at the screen for a long time, thinking there must have been a typo or that sheโ€™d accidentally sent me a list meant for a rich relative. I sent her a polite message back, saying, โ€œHey Sandra, I think thereโ€™s been a bit of a mix-up with the list. Iโ€™d love to help, but this is way beyond what I can manage right now.โ€ I waited for the โ€œOops, so sorry!โ€ reply that I was sure was coming.

Instead, Sandra walked over to my cubicle with a look of pure betrayal on her face. She told me I broke a promise and that she had already counted on my portion to secure the bookings. โ€œYou said youโ€™d help, Arthur,โ€ she whispered, her voice loud enough for the designers nearby to look up from their monitors. โ€œIโ€™ve already told the vendor weโ€™re good for the custom piece because of your word.โ€

I was stunned into silence. I tried to explain that โ€œhelping outโ€ usually implies a modest gift or a hand with the planning, not bankrolling a luxury party for a toddler who wouldnโ€™t even remember the event. She didnโ€™t want to hear it; she just huffed and walked away, leaving me feeling like the office villain for the rest of the day. I tried to focus on my blueprints, but the awkwardness in the air was thick enough to cut with a drafting knife.

Then I saw her post in our group chat later that evening. My blood ran cold when she shared a screenshot of a โ€œSupport Our Teamโ€ fundraiser page sheโ€™d created. The caption read: โ€œSo disappointed that some people go back on their word when it comes to family, but so grateful for those who truly care about my little girlโ€™s future.โ€ Underneath, there was a list of names of people who had already donated, and my name was at the bottom with a big โ€œPledge Withdrawnโ€ status next to it.

I felt sick to my stomach. She was publicly shaming me to the entire office, making it look like Iโ€™d stolen a birthday away from a child. I was about to type a furious response, but something caught my eye in the photo sheโ€™d used for the fundraiserโ€™s header. It was a picture of her daughter, little Mia, sitting in a high chair, but in the background, there was a stack of legal documents on a table.

I zoomed in on the photo, my heart hammering against my ribs. Iโ€™m an architect, so Iโ€™m used to spotting fine details in complex drawings, and my brain immediately recognized the letterhead on one of those papers. It was from an estate lawyer I knew personally. The visible text wasnโ€™t about a birthday party or a crib; it was a formal notice regarding a massive inheritance from a distant relative that Sandra had apparently received months ago.

If Sandra had inherited a fortune, why was she shaking down her coworkers for party favors and custom furniture? I spent the night feeling a mix of confusion and anger, wondering if I should bring it up or just let the whole thing blow over. I decided to reach out to a mutual friend in the accounting department, a guy named Callum who knew everyoneโ€™s business.

โ€œCallum,โ€ I said over lunch the next day, โ€œdid you see Sandraโ€™s fundraiser post?โ€ He looked around to make sure we were alone and leaned in close. โ€œArthur, the whole thing is a mess,โ€ he whispered. โ€œSheโ€™s been doing this to everyone in different departments, telling each person a different story about why sheโ€™s short on cash.โ€

Callum told me that the โ€œcustom cribโ€ wasnโ€™t even for Sandraโ€™s house. Heโ€™d seen her listing similar high-end baby items on a resale site just days after other coworkers had โ€œdonatedโ€ them. She wasnโ€™t throwing a party for her daughter; she was running a sophisticated reselling scheme using our officeโ€™s goodwill as her inventory supplier.

She had targeted me specifically because she knew I was a soft touch and that I had a good relationship with the local craftsmen who made the oak furniture. She wanted the high-resale value of the custom pieces to pad the inheritance she was already hiding. The โ€œbabyโ€™s 1-year anniversaryโ€ was just a convenient emotional hook to get us to open our wallets without asking too many questions.

I didnโ€™t go to HR right away. I decided to have one last conversation with Sandra, but this time, I did it in the breakroom where I knew the acoustics would carry. I calmly asked her about the inheritance documents Iโ€™d seen in her photo. Her face went from pale to a deep, blotchy red in a matter of seconds. โ€œI donโ€™t know what youโ€™re talking about,โ€ she stammered, but the people around us had already stopped talking.

I told her I knew about the resale listings and that I wasnโ€™t going to let her use our teamโ€™s kindness as a business model. The silence that followed was heavy, and for the first time, the โ€œvillainโ€ label shifted from me to her. By the end of the day, she had deleted the fundraiser and the group chat post. She didnโ€™t apologize, but she didnโ€™t look me in the eye for the rest of the week.

A few days later, she quietly resigned, claiming she wanted to โ€œfocus on being a full-time mumโ€ with her new inheritance. The office felt lighter almost immediately. We ended up having a small, genuine celebration for Miaโ€™s birthday ourselves, with a simple cake and some toys we all pitched in a few pounds for. We did it because we actually cared about the kid, not because we were being pressured into a performance.

This whole experience taught me that boundaries are the only thing that keep kindness from being exploited. Itโ€™s okay to want to help people, but you have to trust your gut when a request starts to feel more like a demand. True generosity shouldnโ€™t come with a price tag or a public shaming campaign. If someone tries to make you feel guilty for not meeting their unreasonable expectations, the problem usually lies with them, not you.

I learned that the loudest people in the room arenโ€™t always the ones who need the most help. Sometimes, the quietest ones are the ones truly struggling, and we should save our energy for them. Iโ€™m still a person who likes to show up for my team, but now I do it on my own terms. I donโ€™t let anyone else define what โ€œloyaltyโ€ or โ€œhelpโ€ looks like for me anymore.

We live in a world where itโ€™s easy to manipulate peopleโ€™s emotions through a screen or a group chat. But a real community is built on honesty and mutual respect, not on screenshots and shaming. Iโ€™m glad I looked closer at that photo, and Iโ€™m glad I had the courage to say no. It saved me a lot of money, but more importantly, it saved my peace of mind.

If this story reminded you that itโ€™s okay to say โ€œnoโ€ to unreasonable demands, even from people you like, please share and like this post. We all need a reminder to protect our peace and our pockets from people who think our kindness is a resource to be mined. Would you like me to help you figure out how to set a healthy boundary with a pushy coworker or friend?