A software engineer in Bengaluru opened an email at approximately six in the morning on March 31, 2026. It informed him that today was his last day of employment and that his position had been eliminated as part of a larger organizational change. No manager seated across a table, no warning call, no meeting. Fourteen years of work at Oracle came to an end with just a paragraph and a subject line. According to the friend who later shared his story online, he did not panic after reading it and putting down his phone.
That particular detail alone is worth pondering for a moment because it completely deviates from the typical plot of these stories. Approximately 12,000 people were laid off by Oracle in India, making it one of the biggest workforce reductions the Indian IT sector has experienced recently. Depending on how sympathetic you were to corporate HR practices, the simultaneous announcements at an hour when most people were still half asleep felt either purposefully clinical or just uncaring. As expected, there was a loud reaction on social media: posts about “resilience” on LinkedIn, threads about job hunting tactics, anxiety, and rage. Then there was a story about a friend who just packed his bags and returned home to Bhubaneswar, which was discreetly posted on X by a user by the name of Nayak Satya.
The story took off because of the financial picture that was hidden behind the quiet. The engineer had been building a quiet, traditional financial cushion for years, according to Satya’s post: postal fixed deposits totaling about ₹45 lakh spread across three joint accounts, one with his parents, one with his wife, and one in his children’s names, yielding about ₹28,000 in interest each month. An additional ₹15,000 was generated from fixed deposits totaling ₹30 lakh. Total passive income: about ₹43,000 a month; no labor is needed. No SIPs, no mutual funds, and no app-tracked equity portfolios. Just postal savings, compounded over time, as his parents’ generation would have done. There are no EMIs. He had never taken out any loans on a metro city apartment. Without anyone on Instagram telling him it was the right decision, the math worked because it had been carefully constructed over time.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Subject | Unnamed Bengaluru-based Oracle software engineer (identity not publicly confirmed) |
| Previous Employer | Oracle Corporation (India operations, Bengaluru office) |
| Years at Oracle | 14 years |
| Layoff Date | March 31, 2026 (notified via 6 AM email) |
| Oracle Layoff Scale (India) | ~12,000 employees affected |
| Current Location | Bhubaneswar, Odisha (returned from Bengaluru) |
| Current Activity | Uber driver (self-arranged, working at own convenience) |
| Financial Position | ~₹60 lakh in postal fixed deposits across three joint accounts |
| Monthly Passive Income | ~₹43,000 (from FD interest) |
| Debt/EMIs | None |
| Housing | Living with parents (owns home) |
| Story Source | X (formerly Twitter) post by user @NayakSatya_SG |
| Story Virality | Covered by Times of India, NDTV, Mint, Economic Times, Deccan Herald, Business Today |
| Reference Links | Oracle Layoffs Coverage – Mint / Full Story – Business Today |

He began driving for Uber while residing with his parents in a house he owns in Bhubaneswar. Not out of desperation—the passive income more than pays for necessities—but rather because he has time, knows how to drive, and seems to prefer being busy to waiting for something to happen. That image, of a fourteen-year tech veteran driving his own car and taking rides through his hometown while the rest of the industry spiraled through job boards, is almost purposefully understated. He now controls the pace. No one emails him at six in the morning.
It’s entertaining in and of itself to watch how the internet responds to this story. Some comments expressed admiration in a way that was almost nostalgic: “You should always have backup from Day 1,” one commenter wrote, using the tone of someone who had not always had backup from Day 1. Others were more dubious, pointing out that the calm was genuine but most likely fleeting, and that even while driving an Uber, his mind would still be circling IT job listings. Satya admitted as much, saying, “Yes, of course, end of the day, he is a techie working since last 14 years.” He didn’t permanently give up on technology, according to the story. It’s that he left the panic behind, and it turns out that many people can relate to that distinction.
The deeper context here is that, in contrast to earlier layoff cycles, India’s tech sector is undergoing a reckoning. The affected population includes mid-career professionals with substantial experience who find themselves in a job market increasingly shaped by automation, artificial intelligence, and businesses attempting to do more with fewer engineers. The scale is larger and the delivery mechanisms are colder. The conventional financial advice in that context—maximize your SIPs, expand your equity portfolio, and continue to invest in the market—carries a certain optimism that presumes stability. As a default condition, stability might not be as dependable as it once was. In that context, the engineer’s natural inclination to hold fixed deposits rather than chase returns appears less dull and more calculated.
The Bengaluru flat, the metro lifestyle, the EMI-funded consumption, and the portfolio tracked on three apps are all examples of how much the story defied the prevailing narrative of what a “successful” tech professional looks like. While continuing to work at Oracle for fourteen years, he had reportedly quietly opted out of the majority of that. He didn’t have a loan because he didn’t take the apartment. He didn’t have to filter the financial noise because he didn’t follow the influencers. He had more options than most of his coworkers when the pink slip arrived—not because he made more money, but because he spent differently.
It’s really unclear if this strategy works for every member of the Indian tech workforce. Not everyone can go back to a stable home in a smaller city with their parents. Not everyone has postal deposits totaling ₹60 lakh. The narrative is partially about financial self-control and partially about a particular set of circumstances that not every laid-off worker can duplicate, such as home ownership, family support, and Bhubaneswar’s relative affordability in comparison to Bengaluru. The main takeaway, however, was that you should live below your means, plan quietly, and be in a position where the 6 AM email doesn’t get to write the next chapter for you.
