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  • Audacious@sh.itjust.works
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    5 months ago

    I don’t know about your medical or financial situation, but maybe look into talking to a therapist to vent. They are paid to listen and give advice that could help. Venting is better than bottling up.

  • Max-P@lemmy.max-p.me
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    5 months ago

    Even if you’re the weakest link, a good manager and good team would make sure to assign you tasks that match your level such that it all works out in the end. I’m a software engineer and I’m watching over a junior and a senior. One of them gets bigger tasks, one of them get smaller tasks. It’s similar work, but in the end I want both to have cleared the same amount of tickets and feel good about it. When I plan the next tasks, I think of “what can I give to the junior, what can I hand out to the senior”.

    If you guys are always behind schedule, then some manager isn’t managing properly. It either means you need more team members, or your manager should discuss with you ways to improve your performance. But you’ll rarely find a team where every employee is top notch. Some people just work slower than others. It’s the manager’s job to deal with that.

    As for the venting, I think it’s important to be mindful of other people to be on the receiving end. If you need to do that much venting you might want to consider a therapist, who might be able to help you deal those thoughts and how to manage them.

  • paysrenttobirds@sh.itjust.works
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    5 months ago

    I think about the venting: one thing you can do when you know you’ve gone too far with it is just to thank them for listening and tell them it makes you feel better to be able to say it all out loud. Just turn the conversation away from your problems and leave them with a good feeling at the end.

  • SerotoninSwells@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Please forgive me because after a really shitty day at work I’m going to be direct and say “it’s not you.” I don’t know you or your work situation, but I have worked with so many people that felt this way. I feel this way sometimes too. I think a lot of people on Lemmy will say they feel this way at times. Hell I bet your coworkers feel this sometimes too.

    Work sucks. It sucks more than ever too. Most companies are running on skeleton crews. Someone leaves, takes a sick day, or takes PTO, and the whole thing falls apart. You’re still expected to somehow optimize through all of this instead of the company hiring additional people.

    Fuck that. You’re awesome because you show up and do your job through all the bullshit. I have worked with people that don’t always put up the best “metrics”, or whatever bullshit measurement your middle manager uses to make themselves look good, but those folks brought other soft skills to the team that made the day better.

    You’re human. Vent. Rant. Be upset. Feel your feelings. We all know the current situation sucks and no one can blame you for needing to get it off your chest. More people need to speak up and point out how shitty it is because it’s just getting worse.

    Anyway, if you want someone to vent with then DM me and we can complain together, maybe start a riot or something.

  • electric_nan
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    5 months ago

    The second part is worse than the first. If people like you, and you are pleasant to be around, and they can tell you are doing your best… Then they will be much more forgiving in regards to your work output.

  • TheDannysaur@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Totally agree with others about therapy. When I went, I used it as a sort of emotional dumping ground. My therapist helped me through some pieces but honestly listened a lot. I know the payment part of therapy is viewed negatively… I viewed it as a huge positive. I’m paying this person and so it doesn’t have to be an equal conversation. If I need to vent for 45 minutes straight, I can do that, and they are compensated for that time.

    In reality, I was doing the same thing to friends and family, but I’d only get 30% out at any given time, and so I just spread it around. Getting therapy helped me lessen the amount I needed to vent (some techniques help you work through things) and also have me a central location. It made me a far better husband and friend.

  • SendPicsofSandwiches@sh.itjust.works
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    5 months ago

    1.) Someone is always the weakest link, it is what it is and it’s not necessarily a bad thing (just because you’re possibly not as experienced as your coworkers, doesn’t mean you’re doing a bad job)

    2.) It sounds to me like you have a good work ethic (working over to help your team etc, and being concerned about it to begin with)

    3.) It also sounds like your company may actually just be understaffed or over working your team. As other people have said a ton of companies like to tun skeleton crews. I’ve been victim to this phenomenon in the past and boy did it suck.

    4.) Complaining is definitely something you can work on. Everybody complains sometimes, and people who pretend like they don’t are liars. Keep it minimal, and don’t let it be such a pattern that everyone just hears it and goes “oh that’s so-and-so removed again”. Relax, things happen all the time. You can still talk about negative things, you just don’t also have to always be negative about it.

  • Rhynoplaz@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Sounds a little like imposter syndrome. I bet there are other people on your team who think that THEY are the weakest link. People hide their difficulties and frustrations, so all you see is the finished product without any of the challenges or mistakes that they may have had.

    Complaining is a tricky one, nobody likes the Debbie Downer, who never has ANYTHING good to say, but the Little Miss Sunshine who tries to convince you there’s a Silver lining to your dog getting hit by a car, can be just as bad. I try to balance it and reflect the mood of who I’m talking to.

  • givesomefucks@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    Maybe your view of yourself is accurate, but if coworkers aren’t saying anything and it’s not showing on your evals, then maybe it’s just all in your head?

    No one knows any context, but just ask your supervisor if you can get some honest feedback on any areas you need to improve.

    Imposter syndrome is a real thing, and so is just feeling inadequate for no reason. Sometimes people rate themselves too highly, sometimes the opposite.

    • akwd169@sh.itjust.works
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      5 months ago

      Unfortunately asking for honest feedback doesn’t always work though, I asked my supervisor and manager this over and over and literally only got “nothing your doing great” back everytime when I KNOW there were things they didn’t like…

      So it depends on the workplace and environment

  • Today@lemmy.world
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    5 months ago

    I feel like i could have written this. I’m the slackerist in my department and the loudest complainer. Maybe a lot of people feel that way? I’m working on thinking more positively at work and letting go of things they i can’t change. If i can be more positive my work ethic and thus my productivity will likely improve.