vestmoria
@vestmoria@linux.community
- Comment on what does it mean being nice to your coworkers to you? 1 hour ago:
that would be cruel
- Submitted 1 hour ago to [deleted] | 6 comments
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 hour ago:
being nice is all it takes.
if you mean I have to do this I shouldn’t even waste my time and look for jobs where I work alone. Step 2 is already Get to know your coworkers which for the most part, are irrelevant to me. And I can’t fake that.
Saying hi is not enough?
I have no problem with those who have something interesting to say but most of them for the most part care about stuff so asinine it makes me want to kill them and then myself.
Either I learn really fast to deflect very successfully or I start working alone. To keep my sanity.
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 14 hours ago:
You don’t have to socialize. But being a decent person means sacrificing your comfort for others’ sometimes.
you seem to imply there’s something like a middle point between fully socializing and being decent, which I guess means talking but less? Is this so?
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
You don’t sound ND, you just sound like you don’t care to change. That’s different.
the people who criticize me are not that important to me that warrant I change to some version of what they consider better. I’ve reached a point where it doesn’t make sense anymore to try to be a better, more knowledgeable professional but simply finding a job where people leave me alone. At least I’d be happier.
I guess I’m full misanthrope now
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
Everything you do has been your choice to do.
I don’t know. To me this “choice” feels like a natural response, a default one, the easy answer. I’m not a patient person.
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
I’m sorry but I don’t quite understand your answer: are you telling me to start telling them about chess? because if you’re suggesting I think about several possible answers to prying questions well, I’m simply incapable of doing it fast enough. I’m glad you can, but I simply cannot.
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
You also edited your comment here, at first you were saying something about the person you’re replying to sounding boring.
kindly point where that happened as I have no clue what you’re talking about. Maybe quoting what I changed?
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
By getting “why do you talk so little?” and responding with “why do you talk so much?”, You’re doing what they do to you back to them.
absolutely. I answer a question with another question. Keep playing stupid games, you’ll keep getting stupid prizes.
you can say these words in the nicest way possible, and this exchange still sounds confrontational.
then why do they start it? I’m never the one pestering anyone about why they’re blond, tall, fat…
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
wow, what a beautiful post.
Autism makes it hard to think outside a tried and true path. That rigidity is difficult to deal with, but may be worth looking into.
what do you mean ‘may be worth looking into.’?
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
because some people here offer good advice
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
You don’t need to tell people they’re being boring.
where did you get that from? I don’t tell them directly they bore me, that’s what I think as I imagine leaving.
You can just leave and not interact and thus not hurt their feelings, and thus not have conflict with people.
actually that’s not true: if extrovert A says something I don’t care about, I wait patiently till he ends it and I leave, he will feel offended (an extrovert explained this to me). I don’t understand it but apparently it’s like this.
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
There is no need to go for confrontation, asking why someone talks so little might just be a way of trying to include them in a group or getting to know them, and it sounds like OP just responds as hostile as possible.
why is answering a question with another question confrontational? this is a boundaries issue.
I can’t believe I have to explain this, but here it goes: if people talk much or less is purely subjective: what to introverted A is too much is for extroverted B too little.
extroverted B asked from his subjective point of view, introverted A simply answered from his also subjective point of view.
Why is this confrontational to you?
it sounds like OP just responds as hostile as possible.
wrong again, I calmly state that question. You seem to believe I start yelling at them or looking at them as if I wanted to hurt them.
my main question to you is this: why is answering a question with another question confrontational? this is about boundaries.
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
I’d wager the people you’re having negative interactions with are picking up on that rather than your introversion.
I don’t know, my soon to be former workplace is like a primary school: established coworkers settle in, start yelling, are obnoxious, care about ludicrously stupid stuff I simply don’t care about. This goes on for 30 minutes. every day.
I’m trapped: if I leave for these 30 minutes they go find me to ask what am I doing, usually reading something interesting on my smartphone without them yapping.
Gossiping has already started at this point.
To avoid this I’ve settled for reading what interests me together with them which is not as good as it sounds but apparently placates them.
I still don’t understand how adults can behave so childish.
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
I am many people.
don’t you find it tiring? It’s extremely draining to me to fake being something I am not, specially if faking implies I have to act like an extroverted interested in a coworker’s life, including his sexual one.
One I had a coworker go on a full republican rant about how this country is going to sh%t, so… what do I do with people like this? I simply don’t care about their beliefs.
I like how you present this as a choice and not an imposition.
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
it’s not my job to entertain you.
do you have the ability to listen to boring stories with a smile on your face?
- Comment on I'm on the spectrum. How do I live the rest of my life? 1 day ago:
I wouldn’t phrase it that way but if you must I’d concentrate on people. Societal expectations are not important to me, it’s not something I strive to follow. Where did you get that from? Societal expectations are a form of unconscious, self imposed control.
To you question,about people: what bothers and triggers me is people constantly asking why I don’t talk more, why they feel offended if I answer asking why they talk so much, also feeling offended if I prefer to do my pause alone instead of with them, the talking behind my back which to me equals being unauthentic, misidentifying lack of interest in their lives and wanting to simply do my job as hostility.
Other people are not important to me because I care about them (at least coworkers). They are “important” because I care how they can make my life difficult, the unnecessary drama they create, I don’t want a workplace where I have to fake interest in them so they don’t feel offended and start badmouthing you.
- Submitted 2 days ago to [deleted] | 43 comments
- Submitted 3 days ago to [deleted] | 22 comments
- Submitted 1 week ago to [deleted] | 31 comments
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- Submitted 3 months ago to [deleted] | 17 comments
- Comment on How do I stop having expectations at the workplace? 3 months ago:
just pointing out how you post to rant pal.
- Comment on How do I stop having expectations at the workplace? 4 months ago:
and yet you fail to name any of the faults you claim I have. I commend you for your insightful, based post. Keep it up.
I’m not a licensed therapist
no shit on that one.
- Comment on How do I stop having expectations at the workplace? 4 months ago:
the current job shows me my own limitations, which are more with my colleagues than with the job itself.
but ain’t this not one of your limitations, but theirs? This sentence makes it look like your coworkers slow you down.
could you write what your limitations with your coworkers look like? This is to me a very abstract concept.
- Comment on How do I stop having expectations at the workplace? 4 months ago:
And I am extra vigilant, take responsibility for the safety of those around me at all times.
could you write an example of this? I don’t quite get it.
Say I try to apply this to nursing, it would mean I start checking if my coworkers do their job up to standard, which would be ridiculous, extremely taxing and not my job. Or am I understanding this the wrong way?
I just want to do MY job, not be responsible for other’s lack of structure and laziness.
- Comment on How do I stop having expectations at the workplace? 4 months ago:
Good luck friend.
thanks for that
- Comment on How do I stop having expectations at the workplace? 4 months ago:
and which one are those?
- Submitted 4 months ago to [deleted] | 20 comments
- Comment on I don’t know what to do with this coworker. 4 months ago:
Right, given that you answered genuinely and constructively I’m answering you.
This stuff being the first thing that comes to your mind when you start talking about this coworker I think tells us more about you than it does about the coworker.
yes, it tells you I mean she is unfit to do this job.
I see a nurse who to me is incapable of doing this job because, as said, she won’t pick up any tray or serve food and beverages, and I don’t want to work with a person like this because it means I have to be the one serving her patients as well as mine and as said this unit is chronically understaffed. It’s very frustrating being the one moving patients and delivering food trays and beverages while she sits in front of a computer. This is not what I signed up for.
I don’t know how future me nearing retirement is going to be, but it’s clear I have to quit bedside or study something else, precisely not to become this coworker because as you said, nursing is hard as f*ck on the body.
You write “She deserves some credit, some respect, and some empathy – you’re going to be there too, someday.” You speak like somebody who has the luxury of not having to deal with the consequences of a coworker who gives you the physically harder tasks while she, as said, sits. You understands it’s a bit difficult for me to agree with you, right? Options for her? retire or move to a desk position, both perfectly legitimate options, but don’t pretend to qualify for a job she physically cannot do anymore. Hell, even I cannot sometimes.
OTOH this is not as much her fault as management’s and society’s at large: If we had 3 RN instead of 2, we possibly wouldn’t have this problem, reason why the best I can do might be keep looking for another position, quit this one ASAP and think about studying to get away from nursing. No wonder nobody wants to be a nurse with this job conditions: just today 6 ICU RNs working quit, if you believe one of my coworkers. This ship is sinking.
Happy downvoting I guess.