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My bully got in touch after 20 years…

294 replies

sellotape12 · 23/04/2025 21:53

This evening a message popped up on my LinkedIn. I jumped out of my skin. It was from my old boss, in my first ever job 19 years ago. A man that bullied me senselessly. That experience changed the trajectory of my life.

I haven’t thought about him in almost 2 decades. His message is breezy and a general hello, and commenting on my ‘glittering’ career; as if he’s forgotten.

I remember before he joined I had absolutely loved my job, I was confident and learning. When he arrived, he made me his whipping boy. He set me up for failure. He deliberately embarrassed me in front of clients. Instead of identifying my obvious gaps as a junior and working with me to train me, he took me to task on them all. He told me my accent was too strong. That I wouldn’t make it because “daddy wasn’t rich”. That I was a stupid, foolish little girl for having a relationship in the office (a guy who’s now my husband)

I’ll never forget the day he took me to a café, told me I was incompetent and fired me. I had to leave my apartment and we ended up moving cities. Because my confidence was shot, I fumbled through the next 2 to 3 jobs and didn’t stay very long. I had a lot of therapy.

I don’t know what to say. I haven’t thought about him in almost 2 decades. Part of me wants to delete the message. Another part of me wants to message back with some hard truths. And another part of me is tempted to meet up with him and look him in the eye. Because guess what – we traded places. I worked my ass off in my 30s and I’m now in a much better, more successful position than he. Looks like he went backwards. I want to say look at me now you stupid, silly little man.

But I think I should probably delete it…

OP posts:
couchparsnip · 24/04/2025 06:49

I like Sarah Millican's reply. Classy, to the point. and it can't be used against you.

JustMyView13 · 24/04/2025 06:51

@sellotape12 You can block people on LI, did you know this?
I had a boss that was a bully, so just deleted & blocked him and it’s so therapeutic. No more seeing his likes & updates, impossible to message me. I have a nice safe distance from him.
I particularly relished in the fact that it would deeply offend him because he’s a nosey bastard. 😂

DissDissOrDiss · 24/04/2025 06:53

Do nothing.

Don’t reply, don’t block - it’s an incredibly powerful message that you’ve not engaged at all.

tilypu · 24/04/2025 06:57

Op, I think you should have a lovely time imagining the kind of responses you would like to give.

Then ignore.

Personally I might go with: sorry, do I know you? I see you worked at ex place. I bet you were glad to get out of there. I had the worst boss imaginable. Can't remember his name, but he did me a huge favour by firing me. I wonder what he's up to these days. Probably dead given he couldn't manage his stress levels.

Or: Hi! What a surprise to hear from you after all this time.. Actually I owe you a huge debt of gratitude. You taught me so much about how I didn't want to behave with colleagues - you were so awful to work with. I never forgot that lesson and as a result I have a career that I am so happy with and businesses relationships that are thriving. Thanks again.

Block and move on. Whatever he has to say, you don't need to hear it.

GeorgeMichaelsCat · 24/04/2025 06:59

Personally I'd message back with some cold, hard truths and then block and delete his messages. I could not ignore.

Lioncubhearted · 24/04/2025 06:59

I agree with those saying do nothing. Do not write anything unprofessional! Do not write anything back that you don't want him to copy and post publicly!

Ignore or ignore and block.

Cherrysoup · 24/04/2025 07:01

Very tempting to respond and tell him what a complete arse he was, but I agree, better to ignore and block.

SunnieShine · 24/04/2025 07:02

Hoppinggreen · 23/04/2025 21:57

He is not worthy of a second of your time
I imagine he wants something from you, just ignore him completely.

100%

crockofshite · 24/04/2025 07:05

Find out what he wants.

Then respond that he doesn't have the experience/ skills / temperament / knowledge for whatever he's looking for. Wish him luck with his career.

almostbloody50 · 24/04/2025 07:05

See Id reply with “sorry do I know you?”

Blinkyy · 24/04/2025 07:07

No response is best as then he doesn’t know if you saw the message or not /will reply or not -that’s more frustrating for him imo than a response.

ruffler45 · 24/04/2025 07:08

Go with the ""do I know you"
String him along for a while to see what he really wants
then say "I do know you you are the one that fired me"
then block.

Rhdyghdh · 24/04/2025 07:10

If he was that dreadful be very careful about messaging back. I ended up stalked by a complete nutter.

Flipfloppen · 24/04/2025 07:10

@Okthenguys 👏 👏 👏 Genius.

Mayhemabounds · 24/04/2025 07:11

What if he genuinely wants to apologise?

McCheck · 24/04/2025 07:12

Sounds like you’ve been through a lot and have come out winning. Don’t give him any more headspace. Delete

Zonder · 24/04/2025 07:16

Wouldn't it be fun to reply with "Who are you? Your name is vaguely familiar".

Dogpawsandcatwhiskers · 24/04/2025 07:20

I had exactly the same situation when an old bully of a manager contacted me all bright and breezy on LinkedIn after 15 years. Her behaviour caused me to Ieave a job I Ioved and was good at and it took a while to progress my career and feel secure. HR were hopeless. I looked at her profile and assumed she was after a recommendation. I just deleted her message - there's no way on Gods green earth that I'd recommend her and she must be desperate or forgetful to approach me for one.

Dontbeabitterlemon · 24/04/2025 07:22

As others have said don’t even dignify it with a response. Your success is all the revenge you need!
delete and move on.

Fourecks · 24/04/2025 07:25

I would either ignore or go with a response like @Okthenguys that makes him put in some work and gives him some hope. The advantage of this approach is that it remains professional, whereas hard truths will make it clear that he had a big impact on you.

I wouldn't go with the "sorry, who is this" suggestions. No one is going to believe that someone has forgotten a boss who fired them.

Horses7 · 24/04/2025 07:25

Block and don’t look back, why risk opening up healed wounds?
He obviously wants to use you in some way, he sounds completely toxic - don’t invite that into your life.

AgnesX · 24/04/2025 07:28

Don't even think of replying. People like have no self awareness and will gaslight you.

He's not worthy of a second thought so take the moral high ground and ignore.

arcticpandas · 24/04/2025 07:29

Do not respond. That's the best way to move forward: showing him that he's not even worthy of a response. If you block/send him a message he will have gotten a reaction. Show him he's so small that he's invisible- the ultimate revenge.

HugelyExpensiveCrystalDuck · 24/04/2025 07:33

RadFs · 24/04/2025 00:21

Hi @sellotape12 id reply to his message and tell him exactly what he did to you. My manager bullied me in the name of banter. My close friends from work now say he was only joking but I lived his bullying everyday. I was only about 21 working for a well known bank (not in branch) I lost my confidence and for a long time made me conscious. I would love to let him know what he did all those years ago was bullying behaviour.

I don’t think this is a good idea at all. Unless you are on a telenovela the other person isn’t going to see the error their ways, apologise and become a better person.

They are going to say that that’s not how they remember it and that you were young and they were just trying to help you and that it has worked as now you are successful. And the OP would then be in danger of feeling some of the feelings she had before and there is no need for that to happen.

MeridianB · 24/04/2025 07:33

Ignore, delete, block. Don't give him the headspace.