They Fired Me via Text in Germany; Cancelled My Company Card | Office Revenge
We’re cutting you loose. Your company card is canceled. Figure out how to get home yourself, you’re done.
I read the text message 3 times, standing in that Munich hotel lobby. The marble floor felt solid under my feet while everything else crumbled. My boss’s words glowed on that screen.
Each word hit like a sucker punch. I didn’t throw my phone. I didn’t curse.
I just stood there while people walked past me speaking German, dragging their luggage, living their normal lives while mine fell apart. I typed back: Understood. Thank you for letting me know.
Then I sat down and tried to figure out what just happened. Let me back up. Tell you how I ended up thousands of miles from home, holding $60 and a text message that said 15 years of loyalty meant nothing.
My name is Richard Patterson. I’m 48 years old. Marine veteran, 2 tours overseas before the corporate world.
I’ve got a 16-year-old son named Mason who’s planning for college next year. His mother died from cancer 8 years ago. Sincethen, it’s been just us two.
I started at Consolidated Industries 15 years ago, right after I got out of the service. They make industrial equipment – heavy machinery for bridges, skyscrapers, major Procurement. I found suppliers who could deliver specialized materials.
Steel, precision components, whatever our engineers needed. The job paid well enough. More important, I was good at it.
I could talk to suppliers worldwide, make them understand our specifications exactly. I learned enough German and Italian to get by. I remembered their families, their business challenges.
That’s how you build trust. You show up, deliver what you promise, treat people with respect. My boss was Brandon Hayes, 42 years old.
Fresh MBA from some Ivy League school. Got promoted to division head 2 years ago, right over me, despite my experience. Brandon liked reminding me I was old school.
You need to adapt to modern business practices, he’d say when I insisted on face-to-face meetings. There are more efficient ways, Richard. I’d nod and say Yes sir.
Mason needed that college fund. I needed my pension to vest. So I kept quiet and did my job right.
3 months ago, Brandon called me in. We’ve got a problem. Our steel supplier in Germany – the one providing everything for the Morrison Bridge project – they’re threatening to walk.