I’d had a long-planned trip to Italy approved for months—flights booked, hotel paid. After years of sixty-hour weeks at a high-pressure logistics firm, it was my first real break in five years. Then, the Friday before my Monday flight, HR called me in and fired me for “restructuring.” Just like that, I lost my job—and nearly £3,000 in non-refundable travel costs.
HR told me my approved vacation no longer counted and that I’d forfeited my holiday pay. I left carrying my desk plant in a box, feeling blindsided and disposable. That night, desperate, I checked my travel insurance and filed a redundancy claim, assuming it was a long shot.
The next morning, the insurer flagged my case immediately. My company was under investigation for firing employees right before approved leave to avoid paying benefits ahead of a secret merger. I wasn’t alone—multiple employees had been let go the same way.
I sent proof of my approved leave and recent glowing performance reviews. Within hours, the insurer launched a fraud claim against my former employer and provided me with a lawyer. The merger depended on having no legal disputes, and our terminations had just put the entire deal at risk.
By Saturday evening, the CEO personally offered a settlement. I refused and demanded a year of severance and a written admission that I’d been fired without cause. By Sunday morning—hours before my flight—the company caved. I got the severance, my holiday pay, and my trip was upgraded as part of the insurance resolution.
I flew to Italy not defeated, but free. The job I’d been loyal to dropped me without hesitation, and that moment taught me everything I needed to know. Losing that job didn’t ruin my life—it finally gave me one.