this post was submitted on 23 Feb 2025
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/26365993

I'm the quiet, introverted one and I may be on the spectrum. I like to do my job and go home. I hate drama and drama queens and ignore people when they start gossiping. Many extroverts find that offensive and talk behind my back like teenagers do. This stupid drama is the only reason why I quit my job after finding a new one.

I agreed to stay 4 weeks with the company because some coworkers are actually grown ups, it is a breeze to work with them and I can use their experience to be a better professional.

Back to the immature ones: Past me would ignore their sarcastic and passive aggressive comments, which took a toll on me but now I have nothing to lose and I couldn't care less what they think of me, meaning I started to answer back using their same tone and so sarcastically and passive aggressively as them: they yell at me accusing of doing something on purpose, I politely tell them to calm down and to seek help.

Most of my coworkers are women. Since I started answering back and being a jerk, they toned their b%tchiness way down, it is more pleasant to work here now.

I don't understand why my coworkers treat me with some respect now that I'm being a jerk and I hate I have to be a jerk to be treated with a modicum of respect. I don't know if I'm wrong but I think they have an idea of what a man is supposed to be and now that I fit their definition of a man, they leave me alone because they see in me something familiar to them.

I find it sad I have to be an ass to be treated with respect and I hope to find a workplace where I can be myself and work with no drama.

Is this something that's going to happen no matter where I work?

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[–] sarah2653@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 week ago (1 children)

If your team are chatty, you don’t need to go all out at the same level they are, but showing some willing and chatting at least sometimes will usually be enough to ensure harmony.

my team is not made of people who simply want a hello. I don't want to even say hello because if I do they'll dump on me a monologue about their weekend, what they cooked or the reasons why they're angry at another coworker.

Knowing how to disengage without causing offence or annoyance is also an important skill.

can you write an answer with tips to disengage without causing offence?

I don't think I can do this: while your post seems genuine I still find it ludicrous to have to placate needy people with attention this way. If I give them a bit of attention, they'll want more and talk to me even more about their feelings at the workplace and distract me, something I don't want.

[–] notabot@lemm.ee 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

If you want a productive outcome the first thing you'll probably need to do is realign your thinking about this. You're not having "to placate needy people with attention this way", these are your teammates, and above all, other human beings, and they're inviting you to be part of their group. Engaging with them isn't doing them a favour, it's doing you a favour. Yes, some people will take the slightest opportunity to talk your ear off, but not engaging at all is just setting up walls that leave you on the outside. Equally, you need to respect your need for focus and lack of distraction, which can certainly be tricky if everyone else is reliving the drama of their weekend.

I'm certainly more on the introverted side of things, but I've found it very beneficial to get myself out of my shell regularly to talk to other people at work. The best way I've found is to effectively 'time box' chatting time. Find times when people are generally more relaxed and chatty and you're not focusing on work. I've found lunch time is often good as people will chat, but also have natural reasons to break off themselves. Maybe they go to the gym, or are meeting a friend for lunch, or maybe they just want a bit of peace and quiet! Whatever it is, it's a good opportunity to chat for a few minutes, then if they don't break it off, you can plead a prior engagement and break away without upsetting anyone. Even claiming you have to get back to your desk to finish a report will do. Once people find they can interact with you, but only a bit, they'll often self-regulate.

TLDR: loose the attitude that you're having to "placate" the "needy" and start seeing socialising as an opportunity to develop better conbections with your team. You never know when that can come in handy.

Challenge yourself to relax and spend at least 2 minutes socialising in a friendly way tomorrow, then work on extending that up to a point tgat people seem comfortable with, without them swamping you. You've already handed in your notice, so you have the perfect, low consequence situation to practice in.

[–] sarah2653@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 week ago (1 children)

thanks for answering.

I guess I could play a small social experiment and see how people react before I change workplaces and decide if I can and want to keep placating people this way?

Notice that I get along with some coworkers. With these ones I don’t need to play theatrics. It’s the loud, yelling ones with no boundaries the ones that grind my gears and make me want to run for life.

[–] notabot@lemm.ee 1 points 1 week ago

I definitely feel your pain with the loud, no boundaries ones, they can be exhausting if you either don't or can't manage them efficiently. That's where I found that engaging on my terms at times that gave natural reasons to break off helped. I found most people were a lot less likely to dump if I was 'in' the group, but just seemed busy/preoccupied, rather than when I was 'out' of the group.

Think of it this way, being able to socially interact with your team in a normal work environment is a useful skill, and like any skill you only get better at it by practising. It might be hard work initially, but you've got a great opportunity right now, so go for it. It's no great loss if it doesn't go smoothly, you're heading for the door anyway.

Good luck, and remember, if it all gets too much, you need to go, you've got to have that report on your boss's desk by the end of business today.