29-09-2016 06:12 AM
29-09-2016 06:12 AM
29-09-2016 10:10 AM
29-09-2016 10:10 AM
Thanks guys for the fantastic discussion, especially @Kurra @Appleblossom @Former-Member @Former-Member It's really good to know others have felt like me - it makes this all a lot easier.
@Former-Member do not worry, I've got this - it'll take a month or so to do and it'll be strategic, almost surgical you could say. Sleeping on it over night I think I have a pretty good way to attack this.
Thanks all.
29-09-2016 11:29 AM
29-09-2016 11:29 AM
29-09-2016 03:00 PM - edited 29-09-2016 03:04 PM
29-09-2016 03:00 PM - edited 29-09-2016 03:04 PM
Yes I see disclosing our mental illness can disadvantage us .Any conflict in the workplace can be projected on your shoulders if you reveal you have anxiety,depression or other mental health illnesses.Dealing with people can be difficult.Im not good at covering up but I can see it all fits because of the "survival of the fittest" and due to my downfall 4 years ago due to not coping with bullying in the workplace and letting the "snowball" effect take place.If you can cover up its a good survival skill but you need self care tactics in place.I wish I did better in this area.
29-09-2016 04:38 PM
29-09-2016 04:38 PM
@Former-Member I know what you're saying about bullying in the workplace and the "snowball" effect. It was one of the many things I was dealing with that eventually snowballed me into the MHU. Self care tactics are very important and I can recognise that this is a very important part to recovery.
29-09-2016 09:07 PM - edited 29-09-2016 11:25 PM
29-09-2016 09:07 PM - edited 29-09-2016 11:25 PM
Yes My life experiences made me live on the "fight or flight"response.Since my life snowballed I don't have the energy for "fight",and avoiding people "flight" ,is my escaping,not covering up.I isolated myself from everyone on a personal level,had a lot of counselling but at the end of the day ,kept me alive that's it.I let myself 4 years ago get sick from stress.The workplace environment got me down as well as personal life and I put up with it for a long time eg:had trouble being able to urinate in the toilet at work.Might sound funny but it's one way stress and anxiety affects you.I had bullying going on with a Manager who was incompetent at handling these situations.I never got my life back since.In reflection I wish I had the ability to cover up,tell these pathetic idiots to get lost as my flight response had a big devastating impact including everyday wishing I was dead. .I am full of anger,and resentment.I don't have the energy to fight and worried I ever will.I know I'm not going to survive in the workplace because this shows I am weak.I can't cover this up.In a ideal workplace we are supposed to put our differences aside to achieve the same goals.Be good if this worked in reality or if covering up was as easy as when someone ask "how you going?" and you say "good".I guess covering up in summary is a skill used to "get on with it". If you lose this skill or haven't got it ,life is so much harder.
30-09-2016 04:38 PM
30-09-2016 04:38 PM
@Former-Member I feel for ya. That's totally crap and it's wrong - wrong for you to be treated that way. Take it one day at a time. I was bullied once at work (no where near as bad), you can recover but it takes time.
30-09-2016 07:44 PM
30-09-2016 07:44 PM
03-10-2016 08:01 AM
03-10-2016 08:01 AM
@mrkotter wrote:
@Sahara wrote:If you were having a bad day, problems at home or suffering from depression, if was always implied that you should not let this interfere with your happy, competent, agreeable work persona. Sure, I met heaps of people who dared to show their weaknesses at work; but these people were not generally liked well nor were they promoted.
I've found my work place to be accomodating in other respects. Need to leave early for family, no worries. Having personal problems but this I feel stuck on.
that's very interesting that you write that. Your workplace is accomodating in many ways... but when it comes to MI issues, you fear it wont be? I have not been as lucky as you, I did not work at places where leaving early for family reasons was acceptable, so my view of the work-place may be skewed...
Also, I am like @kdoll, the way I was brought up influenced me a lot when at work. I felt I had to be perfect at all times - and that meant no bad moods..... ever. At home, growing up, I was always yelled at for expressing any emotion, so I learnt to smile blandly and be almost 'vacant' all the time. Like a kind of high-functioning, smiling robot! The perfect employee!!
There were times when I let my gaurd down, but those times tended to be when I knew I was going to leave my work anyway. I've left a lot of jobs. I think I've left around 10 jobs and was fired from 3 jobs. I never feel happy at work.... I would much rather be at home.
03-10-2016 09:36 AM
03-10-2016 09:36 AM
Sounds great @mrkotter. I think you're well placed to make this work. Let us know how it goes.
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