BrightPinkTurtles
Greenlighter
- Joined
- Jul 14, 2016
- Messages
- 2
Sorry, I'm new and still learning to navigate forums and threads.
I'll try to sum up what I can to get to my specific question. I have worked at a certain bank on and off for 4 1/2 years. I have 3 years of work history with them. They got my foot in the door and I always thought I'd spend my life in banking/finance until opiate addiction finally affected that along with the rest of my life. The first time I left after 10 mo. because my husband joined the Army so we moved. I started back with them within 3 weeks of moving home a yr later and stayed 20 mo. until I left for more $ and growth at another financial job becaus my position had plateaued. As a teller I asked to become a notary, cleaned stations & the common areas with my own supplies, organized and rotated files/shred, made list of helpful numbers/contacts/depts for any problem, volunteered at every event, monitored inventory and ordered supplies, in addition to having top transaction counts region/market wide, along with referals, sales, and learning/doing everything personal bankers do from my desk without formal training just to ease others' work load.
My addiction started right after I left the second time. I lost the new job because withdrawals affected my attendance and I missed 4-5 days in 4 months. However that lead me back to the bank, AS A TELLER SUPERVISOR! I did my work well for 5 months. I managed not to take off more than I had PTO for but I was regularly 5-15 min. late worrying about a shot or buzz to get me through the day in the mornings. I hit an all time low almost a month ago. Shit went down at home and I stayed in bed depressed, broke down, and sleeping for 2 days. Miraculously those 2 days a Mon. & Tue. just got me on probation. The next Wed. I finally found a Dr that could see me in 12 days! (That's amazing, I cried, bc sub/bupe Dr's usually have a wait list 3-6 wks out and I'd always give up and keep using.) That was the closest I'd been to help in a yr! The next day I accidentally overslept and was 1 hr late. I opened up to my boss about my struggle and that things would be 150% better in just 11 days! I was scheduled help & meds could have me functioning again same day. Unfortunately, she'd already reported my morning absence to HR so their decision was out of her hands. Honestly, saving me after the No call no shows was way out of her way...I was let go and ineligle for rehire with the company ever again the next day. I'm still heartbroken from losing them.
I guess I'm wondering if there is any chance of getting off a do not rehire list? My work was always excellent, I have A LOT of good history with them, I was seeking help for 8 months, it was finally in sight, and I would be open and honest to future monitoring. I don't expect my job back but it seems like a waste to forever refuse a good long term employee with years of great history over attendance issues while I suffered mental/physical illness of addiction over a much shorter time. Especially since I was so close to life changing treatment
If you read all this, I appreciate you. I needed to share my experience to paint the full picture. If you offer any advice or support, thank you, thank you, thank you!
I'll try to sum up what I can to get to my specific question. I have worked at a certain bank on and off for 4 1/2 years. I have 3 years of work history with them. They got my foot in the door and I always thought I'd spend my life in banking/finance until opiate addiction finally affected that along with the rest of my life. The first time I left after 10 mo. because my husband joined the Army so we moved. I started back with them within 3 weeks of moving home a yr later and stayed 20 mo. until I left for more $ and growth at another financial job becaus my position had plateaued. As a teller I asked to become a notary, cleaned stations & the common areas with my own supplies, organized and rotated files/shred, made list of helpful numbers/contacts/depts for any problem, volunteered at every event, monitored inventory and ordered supplies, in addition to having top transaction counts region/market wide, along with referals, sales, and learning/doing everything personal bankers do from my desk without formal training just to ease others' work load.
My addiction started right after I left the second time. I lost the new job because withdrawals affected my attendance and I missed 4-5 days in 4 months. However that lead me back to the bank, AS A TELLER SUPERVISOR! I did my work well for 5 months. I managed not to take off more than I had PTO for but I was regularly 5-15 min. late worrying about a shot or buzz to get me through the day in the mornings. I hit an all time low almost a month ago. Shit went down at home and I stayed in bed depressed, broke down, and sleeping for 2 days. Miraculously those 2 days a Mon. & Tue. just got me on probation. The next Wed. I finally found a Dr that could see me in 12 days! (That's amazing, I cried, bc sub/bupe Dr's usually have a wait list 3-6 wks out and I'd always give up and keep using.) That was the closest I'd been to help in a yr! The next day I accidentally overslept and was 1 hr late. I opened up to my boss about my struggle and that things would be 150% better in just 11 days! I was scheduled help & meds could have me functioning again same day. Unfortunately, she'd already reported my morning absence to HR so their decision was out of her hands. Honestly, saving me after the No call no shows was way out of her way...I was let go and ineligle for rehire with the company ever again the next day. I'm still heartbroken from losing them.
I guess I'm wondering if there is any chance of getting off a do not rehire list? My work was always excellent, I have A LOT of good history with them, I was seeking help for 8 months, it was finally in sight, and I would be open and honest to future monitoring. I don't expect my job back but it seems like a waste to forever refuse a good long term employee with years of great history over attendance issues while I suffered mental/physical illness of addiction over a much shorter time. Especially since I was so close to life changing treatment

If you read all this, I appreciate you. I needed to share my experience to paint the full picture. If you offer any advice or support, thank you, thank you, thank you!