Last year, they fired me by email. No meeting. No explanation. Not even a goodbye. The strangest part? They didn’t revoke my access to anything—not my inbox, not my project boards, not my login to the internal meetings. So in a moment of pure pettiness mixed with curiosity, I decided to see how long I could keep pretending I still worked there.
I kept joining video calls, quietly muted with my camera off. No one questioned it. I still had access to ongoing tasks, so I’d occasionally update something small just to see if anyone noticed. They didn’t. Sometimes I even showed up at the office with a coffee, walked right in, chatted with a few people, and left like nothing had happened. I posted “work updates” on LinkedIn and tagged the company. People liked them. My coworkers commented. Nobody suspected a thing.
Then one morning, I opened my inbox and saw a message from the CEO himself. Short. Direct. Confusing.
“Hey — quick question. Who exactly are you, and what department do you report to?”
Turns out, during a massive restructuring, half the leadership had changed. New managers, new teams, new faces everywhere. Nobody knew who belonged where. And because I kept showing up like a ghost employee, people just assumed I was part of someone else’s branch.
The CEO had gone digging through the system only to realize that I technically existed… but also didn’t. “Your position doesn’t appear in our org chart,” he wrote. “But you seem to be involved in several ongoing projects. Can you explain?”
I thought I was done. Finished. Exposed.
Instead, he called me in.
We talked for an hour. I told him about the email firing. The lack of communication. The mistake of leaving my access active. The projects I kept helping with simply because no one else was handling them. He listened. Really listened.
By the end of the meeting, he said, “If you’re doing all this without being on payroll, I can only imagine what you’d do if we hired you properly.”
So he offered me my job back.
With a promotion.
And a salary bump.
Sometimes the system kicks you out.
But sometimes, if you slip through the cracks…
you come out the other side exactly where you were meant to be.