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In your career, have you found a drama free workplace?

cross-posted from: https://linux.community/post/1152236

alternative post title: how can I grow a thicker skin, so I simply stop caring what my coworkers think or say?

I'm still looking for a drama free workplace and I don't understand why people seem to enjoy creating chaos out of nowhere

Working in several industries, I've met:

  • white Christian nationalist: too many Arabs and Mexicans in our country, somebody should send them all back to where they belong, and I'm very Christian. This was 5 minutes after meeting me for the first time. Why even tell this to a coworker?
  • Married woman complaining to me about how her husband isn't so affectionate nowadays: 2 minutes after meeting me for the first time. Who does that? Shouldn't you tell this to somebody you trust, like a friend and not a stranger you met 2 minutes ago?
  • An anti vaxxer trying to convert me to his cause, or however you want to call it.
  • And just today: 'it's good that Trump was shot' Why would a sane person blurt that out in the middle of our pause for everyone to hear you? Why do you need to antagonize your coworkers? This was a manager btw.

I have waaaaay more examples, but I'll keep it simple.

I just want to work and go home. Completely drama free. I don't want to care what coworkers think, but apparently I'm very thin skinned and I'm easy to be triggered. Each of the examples I wrote triggered me: I wanted to yell 'fck off, you piece of sht, I don't give a f*ck what you think, leave me alone', or something like that. But I need the job.

My conundrum: If this happens at every workplace, wouldn't it make more sense to stay with the devil you know?

Unless, of course, you've job hopped till you found a drama free workplace... please tell me how you did it.

I want to be the old guy who doesn't give a f*ck about stuff like this, yet it still triggers me.

19 comments
  • There are some places that have a crazy office politics environment (2007 Microsoft, I'm looking at you). If that is the case, I would just change jobs.

    However, if you just have annoying coworkers who are off topic, I would just steer the conversation back to work items ("oh, before I forget, can you tell me about [work related item]?"), then leave the conversation. Other tactics that work for me: look really awkward during personal conversation, never ask how someone is doing, wear headphones.

    Someone once told me it's important to care, but not that much. This has also helped me.

    Beat of luck to you!!

  • Nope. Where there are people there is drama.

    Some are better at managing their drama than others but no workplace is drama free.

  • No there is always someone who causes problems, and other people to react to it and gossip and talk about it.

    I've had entire hourly slack meetings about what someone said.

    People expect the workplace to be fair, and to be treated with respect, and some people don't care about what people expect. They treat people badly if they feel they can get away with it.

  • Yes, my current job is drama free. Not that the work isn't very very hard and stressful, but that my coworkers all work as a team and there has been zero drama in the 2 years I've worked there.

  • I can't say I've ever encountered much "workplace drama" in my life. When I worked in call centers there would've never been time to find out anyone's opinion on anything. Of course then you trade drama for the stress of the job.

    Now I'm back to food service, and other than most of my coworkers not being invested enough to put in their full effort, it's pretty good. Aside from one person, I don't really know anything about anyone's lives that I don't want to and I'm quite happy with that.

    YMMV a lot on both of those

19 comments