- Ex-employees are sharing their stories of quitting their jobs in a new
TikTok trend. - The tag #quitmyjob has 194.7 million views, while #iquitmyjob has 41 million views.
A TikTok subculture devoted to stories of people leaving their jobs behind has garnered hundreds of millions of views as the US sees a mass exodus of employees.
As previously reported by Insider, resignations in the US are at a two-decade high. September 2021 data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics showed that at least 4.4 million people quit their job in the preceding months. The phenomenon has been dubbed "
As "The Great
Many of these TikToks include the tags #quitmyjob and #iquitmyjob, which have 194.7 million and 41 million views respectively.
@alikainwanderlust “A Complete Guide to Moving to Bali” on the blog (link in bio) #movetobali #travelbali #quitmyjob #dontquityourdaydream #bali
♬ original sound - Djrushhour
Various individual TikToks about people's resignation experiences have gone
In one TikTok posted in November with over 11 million views, user @xounique appears to quit her job via an expletive-filled tannoy announcement. In another, user @alikainwanderlust shares her experience of quitting her job, selling all her possessions, and living in Bali with 2.1 million viewers.
Users @laathewmaanen and @maddielovespotatoes also shared viral TikToks within days of each other where they both said they quit their teaching jobs, citing reasons like "burnout" and issues within the educati0n sector as a whole.
Ex-employees are posting about quitting their jobs on other social media platforms too. On Twitter, multiple tweets have gone viral as people quit their jobs to follow a new career, improve their mental health, travel, or start their own business.
@maddielovespotatoes Resigned from my teaching job #teachersoftiktok #quittingteaching #quitmyjob #formerteacher
♬ You Are Enough - Sleeping At Last
The subreddit r/antiwork, which has over a million members, has also become a hub for people to talk about leaving their jobs. In its description, r/antiwork describes itself as a forum for those who want to "end work," users who want support for work-related struggles, and "want to get the most out of a work-free life"
While the forum has existed since 2013, data shows that 500,000 people — about half the total number of users — joined in October 2021.
One of the most common types of posts comes from users telling the stories of how they purportedly quit their own jobs: these posts often also appear to include screenshots of conversations these workers had with their managers.
For more stories like this, check out coverage from Insider's Digital Culture team here.