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- Why We’re So Good at Screwing Ourselves Over
- 35 Times People Spectacularly Screwed Themselves Over
- Quitting a Job Before the New One Is Official
- Posting Trash Talk About Your Boss… on Public Social Media
- Turning a Small Lie into a Full-Time Job
- Gambling the Emergency Fund Because “It’s a Sure Thing”
- Refusing a Plea Deal to “Teach the System a Lesson”
- Cheating on a Partner Using the Family iPad
- Announcing a Breakup Before Having the Conversation
- Turning Down a Promotion Out of Pure Spite
- Weaponizing Social Media During a Custody Battle
- Copy-Pasting Work Emails into the Wrong Chat
- Going All-In on a Multi-Level Marketing “Dream”
- Burning Bridges on the Way Out
- Ignoring Medical Advice Because “I Feel Fine”
- Bragging About Cheating… to the Wrong Person
- Trying to “Fix” Debt with More Debt
- Turning Every Performance Review into a Battle
- Leaving a Paper Trail of Plagiarism
- Turning a Short Break into an Unofficial Vacation
- Building a Personality Around Being “Above” Budgeting
- Turning Down Help Because “I’ve Got This”
- Ghosting a Boss Instead of Resigning
- Turning a Hobby into a Business You Start to Hate
- Replying “All” with the Truth
- Partnering Up with Someone You Don’t Actually Trust
- Refusing to Read the Fine Print… Ever
- Turning Healthy Jealousy into a Full-Time Hobby
- Choosing Image Over Income
- Procrastinating Until Opportunity Closes the Door
- Using Rage as a Negotiation Strategy
- Refusing Therapy Because “I’m Not Crazy”
- Making Every Conflict Public Content
- Trying to Win Every Argument Instead of the Relationship
- Faking Expertise in a Field That’s Easy to Verify
- Refusing to Change Course Because of Sunk Costs
- What All These Self-Sabotage Stories Have in Common
- How Not to Be the Main Character in Your Own Disaster Story
- Extra Experiences & Reflections on Screwing Yourself Over
We all have that one story. The coworker who detonated their career in a single email. The friend who
turned a minor misunderstanding into a full-blown breakup. The neighbor who decided, “How hard can
day trading be?” and promptly donated their savings to the stock market.
Threads like “What’s the best way you have seen someone screw themselves over?” go viral because
they hit a nerve. They’re hilarious from a safe distance and painfully relatable when you realize,
“Oh no… I’ve done a milder version of that.” Underneath the comedy, though, these self-sabotage
stories are basically free case studies in how humans regularly trip over their own lives.
In this article, inspired by Bored Panda–style compilations of real-life disasters, we’ll look at
35 ways people spectacularly screwed themselves over, plus the psychology behind why we keep doing
this. Consider it a lighthearted guide to “what not to do” in your career, relationships, and
everyday decisions.
Why We’re So Good at Screwing Ourselves Over
Psychologists often describe self-sabotage as acting against your own long-term goals: picking
the short-term comfort that leads to long-term chaos. It can show up as procrastination, fear of
success, perfectionism, or diving into obviously bad ideas because they feel good right now.
Common themes behind these self-defeating choices include:
- Fear of failure or success: “If I don’t really try, I can’t really fail.”
- Low self-worth: People unconsciously pick jobs, partners, or habits that match a lousy opinion of themselves.
- Old emotional wounds: Past trauma or rejection quietly shapes present decisions in weird, unhelpful ways.
- Cognitive biases: Things like the sunk cost fallacy, loss aversion, and the planning fallacy push us to double down on bad choices instead of backing out gracefully.
Put all that inside one human brain, add a little stress, a dash of ego, and a touch of denial,
and you get some of the funniest, saddest, “I can’t believe they did that” stories the internet
has ever seen.
35 Times People Spectacularly Screwed Themselves Over
Ready for the main show? Here are 35 situations where people managed to torpedo their own plans,
reputations, or relationships often in completely avoidable ways.
-
Quitting a Job Before the New One Is Official
One guy dramatically told his boss to “enjoy replacing a rockstar” and stormed out before
signing the contract at his new company. The new job fell through during background checks.
He went from “rockstar” to unemployed in under a week. -
Posting Trash Talk About Your Boss… on Public Social Media
A woman spent her lunch break live-tweeting how “idiotic” her manager was using her full
name and employer in her bio. HR did not need to hire a detective. Screenshots were waiting
on her desk the next morning. -
Turning a Small Lie into a Full-Time Job
Someone claimed they “spoke fluent Italian” on their résumé. Their new company landed an
Italian client and proudly put them in charge. By the second meeting, everyone realized
their “fluent” was Duolingo-Level 4 and a lot of frantic nodding. -
Gambling the Emergency Fund Because “It’s a Sure Thing”
A couple decided to “grow” their house down payment by putting the entire savings into a
risky meme stock. It doubled, then crashed. They ended up learning two lessons: markets are
brutal, and landlords don’t accept “diamond hands” as rent. -
Refusing a Plea Deal to “Teach the System a Lesson”
One man facing a minor charge turned down a very generous plea deal because he wanted to
prove a point in court. The judge and jury were not impressed. The final sentence was several
times worse than the deal he rejected. -
Cheating on a Partner Using the Family iPad
A serial texter forgot that all his messages synced to the shared tablet sitting on the coffee
table. His partner opened it to watch a show and instead got a live-updated highlight reel of
his infidelity. Relationship status: self-destructed. -
Announcing a Breakup Before Having the Conversation
Someone updated their relationship status to “single” and posted a dramatic “I deserve better”
caption before actually breaking up in person. Their partner found out from mutual friends
and ended things over text. Not exactly the empowering move they had imagined. -
Turning Down a Promotion Out of Pure Spite
An employee refused a promotion because it came from a manager they disliked. When the manager
left six months later, so did the role and the salary bump. They stayed stuck in the same
position for years while watching peers move ahead. -
Weaponizing Social Media During a Custody Battle
A parent going through a custody dispute posted videos bragging about ignoring court orders
and bad-mouthing the judge. Opposing counsel simply hit “play” in the courtroom. Self-sabotage
level: expert. -
Copy-Pasting Work Emails into the Wrong Chat
One worker meant to vent to a colleague: “Our client is completely clueless.” They pasted it
into the email thread with the client instead. No hacks, no leaks, just the classic “reply
in the wrong window” career speedrun. -
Going All-In on a Multi-Level Marketing “Dream”
A friend quit a stable job to “be her own boss” selling overpriced products. She bought
thousands in inventory, alienated friends with aggressive pitches, and ended up with boxes
of unsold goods and a very awkward Facebook feed. -
Burning Bridges on the Way Out
A guy sent a scathing goodbye email to the whole company, calling out “incompetent leadership.”
He didn’t realize his old director was close friends with a hiring manager at the dream job
he applied for three months later. That reference call was very short. -
Ignoring Medical Advice Because “I Feel Fine”
After a warning about high blood pressure, one man decided to “wait and see” instead of
changing his habits. A few years, zero follow-ups, and a lot of fast food later, he met his
cardiologist the hard way in the ER. -
Bragging About Cheating… to the Wrong Person
At a party, a guy loudly bragged about cheating on tests all through college. He didn’t
realize he was talking to a current professor at that same university. The professor did
not find it charming. -
Trying to “Fix” Debt with More Debt
Someone consolidated their credit cards into a personal loan, then celebrated by running the
cards back up “just a little.” Within a year, they had the loan, the old balances, and a
highly educational conversation with a credit counselor. -
Turning Every Performance Review into a Battle
Instead of listening to feedback, one employee argued with every point, blamed coworkers,
and treated suggestions as insults. After a few exhausting reviews, their boss stopped
coaching and started documenting. The next big meeting was about termination. -
Leaving a Paper Trail of Plagiarism
A student copied an entire essay from an online source, including the references which
still listed a different university in the header. The professor graded it with a printed
copy of the original article clipped to the back. -
Turning a Short Break into an Unofficial Vacation
A worker said they were “stepping out for an appointment” and spent the afternoon posting
beach photos on Instagram. Their boss followed them. So did HR. They returned to find their
key card deactivated. -
Building a Personality Around Being “Above” Budgeting
One guy mocked his friends for tracking expenses. “Life’s too short to worry about money,”
he bragged while paying overdraft fees every month and borrowing cash before each payday.
Turns out, banks very much enjoy when you don’t budget. -
Turning Down Help Because “I’ve Got This”
A student struggling in a tough class refused tutoring, study groups, or office hours out of
pride. They didn’t want to “look dumb.” They ended up repeating the course and paying for
the same credits twice. -
Ghosting a Boss Instead of Resigning
Someone simply stopped showing up to work and never replied to emails or calls then used
that job as a reference on their next application. The new employer checked in. The old one
was… not kind. -
Turning a Hobby into a Business You Start to Hate
A talented baker turned their relaxing weekend hobby into a full-time hustle without planning
prices, hours, or boundaries. By year two, they were exhausted, underpaid, and no longer
enjoyed baking at all. -
Replying “All” with the Truth
An employee meant to forward an email to a friend saying, “Our client has no idea what they
want.” They hit “Reply all.” The client very quickly figured out exactly what they wanted:
a new agency. -
Partnering Up with Someone You Don’t Actually Trust
Two acquaintances started a small business with no written agreement and very different
expectations. Within months, one felt exploited, the other felt sabotaged, and their friendship
and finances both imploded. -
Refusing to Read the Fine Print… Ever
A guy signed up for multiple “free trials” that auto-renewed at premium rates. He ignored the
emails, never checked his statements, and only noticed when his card was declined at the
grocery store. -
Turning Healthy Jealousy into a Full-Time Hobby
One partner constantly checked phones, interrogated friendships, and assumed the worst. The
relationship finally ended not because of cheating, but because living in a permanent
investigation got exhausting. -
Choosing Image Over Income
Someone kept upgrading cars and phones to “look successful” while living paycheck to paycheck.
The people they were trying to impress didn’t notice. Their credit score did. -
Procrastinating Until Opportunity Closes the Door
A student got into a great program but put off sending one last form. “I’ll do it after
this show,” then “after this weekend.” The deadline passed. The spot went to someone else.
All that work undone by one missing email. -
Using Rage as a Negotiation Strategy
An employee demanded a raise and started the conversation by threatening to quit and calling
leadership “clueless.” The company accepted the “threat” as a resignation. They walked out
with no raise and no job. -
Refusing Therapy Because “I’m Not Crazy”
A person watched their relationships, jobs, and health crumble one after another but rejected
any suggestion of therapy as an insult. Years later, exhausted and lonely, they finally
reached out for help and wished they had done it much sooner. -
Making Every Conflict Public Content
A couple turned every fight into a TikTok storytime. It got them some views, but it also
turned their relationship into a performance. Eventually, there were more cameras than
conversations, and they broke up on the same app they used to overshare. -
Trying to Win Every Argument Instead of the Relationship
One partner always had to be right. Every disagreement became a courtroom drama. Eventually,
their significant other stopped arguing and started packing. They “won” the final fight
by ending up alone. -
Faking Expertise in a Field That’s Easy to Verify
A guy claimed to be an “experienced software developer” to impress a date. She casually asked
him to help fix a small bug in a real project. He confessed he’d only completed an online
tutorial. Date: over. Credibility: gone. -
Refusing to Change Course Because of Sunk Costs
A friend stayed in a failing business for years, saying, “I’ve already put too much into this
to quit now.” The longer they stayed, the deeper the hole became. The hardest lesson: sometimes
walking away is not failure it’s rescue.
What All These Self-Sabotage Stories Have in Common
Whether it’s an email meltdown or a relationship going down in flames, most of these “best ways
I’ve seen someone screw themselves over” share similar roots:
- Short-term emotion beats long-term thinking: Anger, ego, or fear wins the vote, and future-you pays the price.
- Avoidance feels safer than honesty: Ghosting, procrastinating, and pretending not to see the problem usually make it worse.
- Cognitive biases hijack decisions: Sunk costs, overconfidence, and loss aversion keep people clinging to bad choices longer than they should.
- Shame stops people from asking for help: Many of these disasters could have been prevented with one awkward but honest conversation.
The good news? Once you recognize these patterns, you can spot them early in yourself. It’s a
lot more fun to read about spectacular fails online than to star in your own.
How Not to Be the Main Character in Your Own Disaster Story
You can’t control everything in life, but you can dramatically reduce the odds of spectacularly
screwing yourself over. A few habits help:
- Pause before big decisions: If you’re furious, humiliated, or terrified, wait. Draft the email, don’t send it.
- Ask, “What would future-me thank me for?” Short-term comfort (avoiding a talk, skipping a bill) usually loses this test.
- Get a second opinion: A friend, mentor, or therapist can spot self-sabotage patterns you’re blind to.
- Drop the all-or-nothing mindset: Life is rarely “quit everything or stay forever.” Renegotiate, pivot, downsize, ask for help.
- Apologize early and sincerely: One honest apology beats months of stubborn damage control.
You’ll still make mistakes that’s non-negotiable. But with a bit of self-awareness, your
mistakes can stay in the “mildly embarrassing anecdote” category instead of “viral cautionary tale.”
Extra Experiences & Reflections on Screwing Yourself Over
The reason a question like “What’s the best way you have seen someone screw themselves over?”
hits so hard is that nearly everyone has a story where they were the one holding the shovel.
Maybe you didn’t torch a career with an email or lose a house payment in crypto, but chances
are you’ve:
- Stayed in a bad job too long because leaving felt scary.
- Picked a fight you knew you didn’t actually care about, just to “win.”
- Put off something important until the chance quietly disappeared.
- Turned down help because you didn’t want to look weak or unprepared.
One of the subtler ways people sabotage themselves is by clinging to a story about who they are:
“I’m just bad with money.” “I always ruin relationships.” “I’m not a school person.” Those
sentences sound like descriptions, but they function like instructions. If you think you’re
terrible with money, you’re less likely to learn budgeting. If you “always ruin relationships,”
you might give up at the first sign of conflict instead of leaning in with curiosity.
Another common pattern is confusing drama with meaning. Some people feel most alive when
everything is on fire the intense arguments, the last-minute deadlines, the risky financial
moves. Calm feels boring, so they unconsciously stir up chaos: overspending, cheating, quitting
suddenly, or rehashing old fights. The problem is that the bill for that intensity eventually
comes due in the form of burnout, debt, or broken trust.
If you look back at the big “I really did that…” moments in your own life, you’ll often find a
fork in the road where a small, unglamorous choice could have saved you. You could have asked
one clarifying question instead of assuming. You could have told the truth instead of inventing
a complicated lie that needed constant maintenance. You could have admitted, “I don’t know how
to do this, can you show me?” instead of faking it and hoping nobody noticed.
The upside to all these horror stories is that they’re incredibly educational once the sting
fades. People who have really, thoroughly messed up often develop an almost spidey-sense for
their own patterns. They recognize the early warning signs: the urge to send a spicy message,
the itch to buy something expensive to feel better, the impulse to “test” a relationship by
picking a fight. They learn to pause, breathe, and ask, “Am I about to create a problem I’ll
be stuck cleaning up for months?”
Ultimately, the best way to use threads like these isn’t to sit in judgment but to practice
gentle self-audit. Where are you still making decisions that future-you will side-eye? What
would it look like to care a little more about stability than about temporary ego boosts? And
if you already have a few legendary self-sabotage stories in your past, don’t waste them.
Laugh, learn, and let them remind you that the next time you’re tempted to blow up your life
for a feeling that will last five minutes, you can choose differently.
Because the most satisfying plot twist of all isn’t watching someone else screw themselves over
on the internet. It’s discovering that, with practice, you can stop doing it to yourself.
