←back to thread

Why We Spiral

(behavioralscientist.org)
318 points gmays | 2 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
Show context
SamoyedFurFluff ◴[] No.45241919[source]
As a person with long experiences in trauma responses, I see this sort of behavior pattern everywhere. There’s so much “trust your gut!!” advice when the gut can be deeply wrong especially when it comes to identifying interpersonal threats. We don’t educate people in how to process their feelings in a healthy manner and to differentiate what they feel is happening and how they should behave. This results in anything like saying someone has “bad vibes” to be a reason to exclude them, to actively covering for someone with a known pattern of harming people simply because they are charming.
replies(7): >>45242303 #>>45242317 #>>45242526 #>>45242576 #>>45243401 #>>45247100 #>>45247276 #
Waterluvian ◴[] No.45242526[source]
I think a big part of maturing professionally is how I’ve gotten a better handle on not trusting my gut.

He’s here to take my job. The VP knows him and hired him directly. There’s so many signals each week that say I’m right. He’s trying to take credit for a decade of my hard work. He’s going to exploit me and everyone will believe him and not me.

The more likely reality: he’s new here and I’ve been here for a decade. He was hired to basically replicate my success for sibling teams. He’s feeling immense pressure. He’s probably terrified of failing. I probably make him feel threatened. My defensive posture makes this worse. I give him signals all the time that he probably reads as me wanting him to fail or not liking him.

replies(3): >>45242678 #>>45243412 #>>45248614 #
leptons ◴[] No.45242678[source]
>He’s here to take my job. The VP knows him and hired him directly. There’s so many signals each week that say I’m right.

In one situation for me, this was exactly the case. It became more clear as each week went by. It was a "bro" situation between the C-level and the new hire, and the C-level was a "30 under 30" so there was a high school mentality about it.

replies(1): >>45243022 #
1. mikert89 ◴[] No.45243022[source]
You can almost never win this situation, I have seen funded startups literally go under because of friendships and incorrect attribution of who did what.
replies(1): >>45244106 #
2. awesome_dude ◴[] No.45244106[source]
Ah, the true sign of a "team" - credit being apportioned...

The problem isn't one person being over looked, it's that one person is being praised.

We all make contributions that we feel are noteworthy, but when someone else's noteworthy contributions are highlighted we then have to ask, why theirs and not ours.