weekend open thread – April 18-19, 2026 by Alison Green on April 17, 2026 This comment section is open for any non-work-related discussion you’d like to have with other readers, by popular demand. Here are the rules for the weekend posts. Book recommendation of the week: The Fox Wife, by Yangsze Choo. A Chinese detective story in which the grieving mother hunting her daughter’s killer happens to be a fox who can turn into a woman. Slow-paced, beautifully written, and a bit heart-breaking. (Amazon, Bookshop) I earn a commission if you use those links. You may also like:all of my 2024 and 2025 book recommendationsall of my book recommendations from 2015-2023the cats of AAM (updated!) { 0 comments }
open thread – April 17, 2026 by Alison Green on April 17, 2026 It’s the Friday open thread! The comment section on this post is open for discussion with other readers on any work-related questions that you want to talk about (that includes school). If you want an answer from me, emailing me is still your best bet*, but this is a chance to take your questions to other readers. * If you submitted a question to me recently, please do not repost it here, as it may be in my queue to answer. You may also like:my employer fined me $90 for being latemy boss pees in a cup and dumps it in the kitchen sinkneed help finding a job? start here { 651 comments }
senior employee is a terrible communicator, retaliation via nut, and more by Alison Green on April 17, 2026 It’s four answers to four questions. Here we go… 1. My senior employee is a terrible communicator My employee, “Jordan,” has been in a senior role for 15 years. Their job involves communication and coordination across many different teams and with customers; understanding and being understood is one of the most important competencies. Jordan’s communication skills are lacking. I have highlighted this as an area for improvement every year I have been their manager (nearly five years) and in annual goals and performance reviews, as did their previous manager. Jordan has attended trainings and I have provided job aids and feedback, but there has been little improvement. I deliver feedback at our weekly meetings, and I only raise one thing at a time, even though there are usually 3-5 communication breakdowns I’ve observed. I bring it up and ask for their perspective, then talk through my perspective and what I’d like to see differently in the future. I give feedback 1-2 times per month, because more than that feels like I am putting them down and being nitpicky every time we talk. Jordan seems to disagree with me. I believe this is the root of their lack of improvement — they don’t think they need to improve because they don’t believe me that there is a problem. When I ask what support they need, they have not been able to give me anything actionable, just “I will work on it.” My boss and I feel that if Jordan can’t improve in this skill, we may need to replace them. Jordan struggles to put themselves in the context of the person with whom they are communicating and, conversely, when they are interpreting someone else’s communication, they struggle to put themselves into the context the person is speaking from and what matters to them. Here’s one typical recent example: Jordan needs to, let’s say, change the design of a teapot a customer has ordered for five years. The customer asked, “Will the new teapots still be able to go in the dishwasher?” Jordan responded, “You can still wash the teapots.” The customer interpreted that response as a “yes.” I knew that we hadn’t tested whether the teapots could go in the dishwasher, and that Jordan was speaking about hand-washing. I said, “We aren’t sure if the teapots can go in the dishwasher. We will get back to you.” Jodan later emailed the customer, “I have confirmed with the Dishwashing Safety team that the teapots are rated to 90 degrees.” The customer does not know what that means; they do not know that we consider teapots rated to 150 degrees to be dishwasher safe, and anything less not safe. I had to again jump in to clarify that the teapots aren’t dishwasher safe. Jordan delivered, verbatim, the response from our internal team to the customer without doing any translation into the customer’s context, or even making sure that the answer actually answered the customer’s question. The customer could have left with the impression that the teapots are dishwasher safe, resulting in customers unhappy when their teapots did not withstand dishwashing. I’ve asked my boss, HR, and manager friends about how to coach Jordan. One person advised that I should document every instance of communication issues and review them with Jordan weekly. I am concerned that, particularly for a senior employee, this will feel as if I am hovering over their shoulder watching everything they do and documenting every tiny mistake they make, which will be demoralizing. What do you think? Jordan isn’t right for this job. You’ve been coaching them for nearly five years. They not only haven’t improved, they disagree that there’s even a problem to fix. The reality is, not everyone has the skills you’re looking for. Some people can get better at it within the amount of time that a manager can reasonably invest in coaching. Some people could get better at it if they had extremely hands-on help over a long period of time, going beyond what’s reasonable for a manager to invest. Even with that, some people won’t ever get better at it to the level that’s needed in a job where it’s a central and essential skill. You have made a good faith effort, and it’s not working. It’s time to move to the next step in managing the situation, which means telling Jordan very clearly that things are now at the point where if you don’t see XYZ specific changes in XYZ amount of time, you will need to let them go. (That amount of time should not be lengthy, given how long you’ve already been working on this — I’d give a maximum of two months to demonstrate significant improvement or otherwise you’ll just be dragging things out for no reason.) Related: my employee can’t accept that his performance is bad 2. My coworker is in crisis but not doing her work I work for a very small company (literally four employees and the boss) that I was hired to eight months ago. HR is one of several roles that I fulfill, and one I’ve had zero training for. My boss is great but he’s away from the office most of the time because he isn’t a U.S. citizen and he travels a lot, so we employees are very free with little oversight most of the time. Enter problematic coworker, Lisa. Lisa is a wonderful coworker and good friend … most of the time. Other times, she gets drunk at work and misses workdays with little notice, even though she’s already used up all her allowed PTO for the year. In the last few months, she’s lost both her parents and had some other serious personal stuff going on; she’s really going through it and I would feel for her deeply even if we weren’t friends. Recently she was hospitalized for what I suspect may have been an attempt to end things, though I don’t know that for certain. She’s been saying she’ll work from home while she recovers, but she doesn’t answer work messages or send emails, which is a major portion of her job. I don’t want her to be stressed out when she should be recovering, and I definitely don’t want her to lose her job, but like I said, she’s used her PTO for the year already and she’s just not doing her work. I’m worried the boss will let her go considering the problems we’ve had with her in the past, but I also don’t feel right about just letting her miss work. What do you recommend? Oh no. Your company is too small to be covered by FMLA (which would require you to hold her job for her for up to three months while she’s on leave), but that doesn’t mean that it can’t choose to offer something similar. How senior is your role? If you’re fairly junior and your HR work is usually things like dealing with benefits paperwork and ensuring payroll gets processed (as opposed to higher-level HR strategy, employee relations, management, etc.), it’s probably not really within your purview to handle this; your boss would need to. But someone should be reaching out to Lisa to find out what she needs during this time and giving her some options, which ideally would include the option to take extended leave if she needs it. (If we’re using FMLA as a framework, that leave would normally be unpaid since she’s out of PTO, although of course in practice that can make it harder for people to use it.) 3. How honest can I be in a stay interview? My organization recently announced that they will be conducting stay interviews. In the past, they conducted anonymous surveys to get an idea of general workplace perception and environment, and I do not know if the interviews are in place of or in addition to the survey. Either way, I do have real issues with the organization and its leadership that I have raised on surveys in the past but which still remain unaddressed (mostly to do with a lack of timely communication between leadership and staff and attempted standardizations of policy that only work for staff in non-public-facing positions, although there are also unaddressed issues involving a huge safety lapse a couple of years ago) but am unsure of whether it’s safe to bring up those concerns in a stay interview. I feel like it would be one thing to mention these issues in an anonymous survey or even an exit interview, but I am concerned that something I say in a position where they will know who I am and that I currently intend to continue working for the organization could potentially be held against me. Are my concerns founded? Will being fully honest in a stay interview potentially harm me, or would it be more helpful to share the issues I feel the organization has? There’s no guarantee that your feedback in a stay interview won’t be used against you. It shouldn’t be — that would go against the entire spirit and purpose of conducting them — but does it happen? Sure. Not all the time and not under good managers, but enough that it’s a legitimate worry. Generally the way you know whether it’s safe to be honest with upward feedback in any form, and particularly when it’s non-anonymous, is by watching whether your company has done the work to assure people it’s safe. That’s stuff like creating opportunities for meaningful input that’s taken seriously and at least sometimes acted on, actively welcoming dissent, and demonstrably not penalizing people who offer opinions that make leadership uncomfortable. If you haven’t seen enough of that to feel comfortable, assume it’s safer to pull your punches. On top of all that, in your case, you’ve already raised these issues and they haven’t acted on them. So they already have the info you’re considering offering with your name attached this time; there’s not a lot of benefit to you in sticking your neck out further. 4. When you’re allergic to nuts and your employer puts nuts in your workplace as retaliation A question based on a novel I read recently. The main character is a waitress with a severe nut allergy. The restaurant doesn’t serve nuts, so it’s all good. She upsets the owner and comes in a few days later to find that they’ve updated the menu to include several items with nuts. When she asks if she’s being fired, she’s told no, that would require paying unemployment, but she’s free to quit if she can no longer perform the job duties. Other than being overtly evil, this wouldn’t hold up, right? She could still file for and receive unemployment? She could likely still receive unemployment, both because it’s a fundamental change in the job for her that means she has to leave it through no fault of her own, and also because it’s clearly retaliatory. In fact, depending on what she did to upset the owner, it’s possible there’s legal recourse too; if the nuts were in retaliation for her engaging in legally protected behavior (like making a good faith report of harassment, discrimination, or safety violations or requesting medical or religious accommodations), that would be illegal. And employment lawyers will tell you that retaliation is often much easier to prove than other offenses from an employer. You may also like:my new team is taunting me because I have a nut allergymy employee disagrees with my evaluation of his performancemy boss cares more about "confidence" and "strength" than truth and accuracy { 287 comments }
how do I handle being off my game at work because of a medical situation? by Alison Green on April 16, 2026 A reader writes: About a year ago, I got prescribed a CPAP machine. Very important for, you know, supplying oxygen to my brain while I sleep, but one doozy of an adjustment period. It took me about a month to adjust to wearing it at night, and during that month I lowkey felt like I was dying. I was getting very little sleep, and that in small bursts. I was exhausted all the time, and exhaustion made me stupid and slow. I work in a compliance-related role. My job involves assessing regulatory liability for my employer and potential misconduct by licensed employees. If I find against an employee, it’s the kind of thing that could follow them for the rest of their career, whether at my firm or any other they move to. If I find in favor of my firm where I should have found fault, that can open us up to regulatory complaints and investigations. Operating on broken and insufficient sleep for a month while facing those potential consequences for bad calls scared the dickens out of me. I had productivity numbers to meet, but I simply could not stay focused enough to work at the normal speed, and awareness of the potential stakes of an error of judgment made me extra cautious. I was operating at about 40% of our expected performance, and even after I adjusted it took me some more time to fully get back up to speed as I paid off the sleep debt. But a month-plus of turning out a fraction of the work I’m expected to do had a predictably terrible effect on my career. I wound up on a performance improvement plan and lost a lot of credibility with my boss. And unfortunately for me, my boss is the kind of guy who doesn’t really understand exhaustion as an excuse. As he sees it, either you’re so badly off you should take PTO or you’re fine and coming in to work and doing what needs doing. But I couldn’t exactly take an entire month of PTO, that’s far more than my allotment! And I don’t think short-term disability can be applied here. I had a similar situation early in my career, too, when I was prescribed a strong bronchitis medication that interfered with my judgment and focus during the two weeks I was taking it. I only had five days’ sick time and had used half of it, so the only option I saw was to go to work high, which even at entry-level stakes is a bad idea. So, how does one navigate these situations? My understanding is that accommodations for health are meant to offer you support to maintain the expected productivity, not to make it okay to underperform. Are there ways to approach an “I know I’m underperforming but I can’t do better until my body stops doing a stupid thing, which is some indefinite number of weeks away” conversation that could actually sound credible? How do people navigate this? The wording you want is, “I’m dealing with a medical situation that is making it hard to be at 100% right now. I’m working with my doctor to resolve it and we’re hopeful I’ll be back to normal soon, but I wanted to mention it in case you notice me seeming off my usual game.” Or, “I want to let you know that I’m dealing with a medical condition that has been wearing me out lately. I’m working with my doctor on a treatment plan and I don’t expect it to continue long-term, but I wanted to mention it in case you notice me seeming off.” You don’t need to disclose details — just you might notice this, I’m working on it, and I’m hoping it will be resolved soon. It’s ideal to say it before your boss talks to you about changes in your work, but if you didn’t, you can still say it once they do. The idea is to give your manager context for what’s happening so they don’t have to wonder if you’re just being careless or aren’t invested in your job anymore, or otherwise draw the wrong conclusions about what’s going on. Most managers will give you a lot more slack if you explain that yes, you’ve flagged it too, there’s a reason for it, and you’re working to resolve it. You may also like:should I tell my boss about a personal situation that might affect my work?should you tell your boss if you’re struggling with mental health issues?my team demands aggressive positivity ... and I have a medical condition that leaves me exhausted { 117 comments }
my employee asked for a 170% raise by Alison Green on April 16, 2026 A reader writes: One of my employees has asked for a massive raise. He has good reasons for wanting a raise: his responsibilities have ended up being very different than what he was originally hired for, he’s been doing very well with them, and he’s definitely paid below market for what he’s ended up doing. We hired him at $15/hour for an entry-level position with no hard requirements, and based on some quick market research, I’d say the work he’s doing now is closer to a $20-$25 range, so I’m actually in favor of giving him a pretty substantial increase. The trouble is that he’s asked for an increase to $40/hour, and he’s only been here for four months. That’s more than I make, and I’m honestly shocked that he thought this was reasonable to ask for. He says he did some market research, but that number hasn’t been supported by anything I’ve been able to find. Four months also seems like a short amount of time to me, but I don’t know if the significant change in duties should override that. I want to advocate for my employee with our company’s owner (who is very reluctant to spend money), but I am suspicious that bringing the employee’s $40/hour request to him will make my employee (and potentially me as well) look completely out of touch with reality. Our owner is extremely hands-off — we’re all remote, and I talk to him maybe once every month or two for about 10 minutes. I told my employee that $40/hour was more than I make and gently suggested that asking for a lower number might be a better idea, but he shrugged that off and said he isn’t set on that number, but sees it as a good “starting point.” Any suggestions for how to approach this? I answer this question over at Inc. today, where I’m revisiting letters that have been buried in the archives here from years ago (and sometimes updating/expanding my answers to them). You can read it here. You may also like:is a salary request 40% over the max enough to rescind an offer?when I asked for a raise, my boss said I was ungrateful and threw a tantrummy employee is holding me hostage over a raise { 90 comments }
what are the most ridiculous requests you’ve ever seen made of assistants? by Alison Green on April 16, 2026 Next Wednesday is Administrative Professionals Day, so let’s talk about the weirdest or most ridiculous requests you’ve ever seen made of assistants. To start us off, here are a few that have been shared here in the past: • “In my first job out of college, my boss asked me to dry his shoes, which got wet in the rain. He plunked them down on my desk and said he needed them dry for a meeting in 15 minutes. I’m still not sure what he expected me to do because at a certain point, only time can dry things. The hard, unabsorbent paper towels from the bathroom weren’t going to cut it. I was a receptionist but in no way a personal assistant.” • “I once had an office-assistant-type job at a wedding and event venue. Turns out, my MOST ESSENTIAL duty, which was not listed in the job description and did not come up in the interviews, was to make the GM’s meal-replacement shake at lunch and then check on him every half hour to see if he finished it, remind him to finish it if he hadn’t yet, then wash the shake container and return it exactly to the correct spot in the cabinet. Other work needed doing? If it was in the afternoon, it wasn’t getting done.” • “We had a new associate one year who, come to find out, had grown up very well-off and was accustomed to being waited on, and then expected the support staff at the firm to take up where their household staff left off. I don’t even think they were a month in when their practice group chair came and had a chat with them about the fact that their administrative assistant was, in fact, not their personal assistant. For example, the AA would not be picking up any coffee order on her way in (much less the ridiculous one the new associate wanted), nor would she be getting their lunch every day. We also don’t ask our assistant, who sits further from the supply closet than they did, to get up and get them a single pen or two file folders, especially when the AA is working on a deadline filings or client billing. First year associates were generally expected to walk themselves the 10 feet to the supply closet and get their own stuff. The AA would also not be placing all of the first year’s calls, picking up their dry cleaning, nor getting their personal credit card billing issue straightened out.” Please share your own in the comments. You may also like:8 horror stories for Administrative Professionals' Daywe need to end Secretaries Dayhow do I ask the CEO if I can "borrow" his assistant for my projects? { 700 comments }
I’m allergic to my coworker’s perfume, is the thumbs-up emoji unprofessional, and more by Alison Green on April 16, 2026 It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go… 1. I’m allergic to my coworker’s perfume, and HR says I have to manage it on my own I work hybrid and am required to be in office a couple days a week. I’m also allergic to certain scents and perfumes. Things like vanilla and citrus don’t bother me, but strong floral scents cause my sinuses to swell up, culminating in a migraine. It’s not pleasant, so I try my best to avoid anything that triggers it. Unfortunately, nobody seems to take scent allergies seriously or know they exist at all. My colleague, Linda, wears a perfume so strong that I can smell where she’s been 10 minutes after she’s been there. There’s an entire quadrant of the office I avoid because she’s sitting there and I can’t bear the miasma emanating from her cubicle. My manager, knowing how miserable I have been, reached out to HR about it because we didn’t want to cause any awkwardness or discomfort to Linda and wanted to go about things on the level. HR told her it’s the employee’s responsibility to manage their own allergies. They asked what I do in public. For one thing, in public, I have the option to remove myself from the situation, whereas I’m required to be here for my job and don’t have any avenues to escape. Furthermore, I’m having to isolate myself socially and politely decline invitations for coffee runs from people since being in the elevator with Linda for a few minutes is enough to derail my whole day. As such, after HR’s callous verdict, I’ve spent the past two years silently avoiding her and that part of the office, feeling like there’s nothing I can do to improve my situation. I’ve gently told her a few times I’m allergic to perfume. Things came to a head a few weeks ago when she was crowding me in a tiny room and I had to reiterate that I’m allergic to her perfume, and she was totally shocked by this revelation, asking everyone else in the room if she smelled. My director was there and smoothed things over with, “She just has a sensitive nose!” The more I thought about it, the more it bothered me. Why am I being forced to tiptoe around someone’s need to smell pretty at the expense of my right to exist in comfort? After that incident, I cried in the director’s office and told her about what HR said. She told me Linda is a kind person and I should speak to her directly about it. I feel so awkward about this suggestion. I’m not uncomfortable with talking to people to resolve conflicts, but, having never been put in a situation like this, I have no idea how to approach it. I’m not anywhere near the level of demanding nobody uses laundry detergent or needing unscented soap in the bathrooms, but even so, this feels like an unfair stance by HR. How would you suggest I approach this problem? Should I talk to Linda directly? If so, what should I say? “It’s the employee’s responsibility to manage their own allergies”? Legally speaking, that’s only true to a point. If your allergies are severe enough, the Americans with Disabilities Act requires them to try to find a way to accommodate you, and in a lot of cases implementing a fragrance policy would be considered a reasonable accommodation under the law. (Here’s some info from the Job Accommodation Network on this, and here’s some more.) They could also consider creating a fragrance-free zone for you and others who need it, but that would need to include accommodations for things like elevators too. So first and foremost, HR isn’t doing their job here, and you and your manager should feel free to cite the law and push back. Beyond that, though, it’s not a bad idea to try to talk to Linda directly since she’s the main source of the problem right now. Since it just came up, you have an easy opening. Sample language: “I’m so sorry to ask this, but I do seem to be allergic to the perfume you wear. It’s a lovely scent but it gives me sinus problems and migraines. Would you be willing not to wear it to work?” If she refuses, then you can say, “In that case, please understand that I can’t be in a small room with you — it’s nothing personal, just a medical thing.” But at that point, HR is really the right next step (preferably with your manager’s involvement this time). 2. Is a thumbs-up emoji an acceptable email response? I am fully prepared that this is a “me” thing and not worth the battle, but I’ve recently been introduced to Gmail’s emoji response feature. I emailed my direct report and they used the “add reaction” feature to reply with a thumbs-up. Professional communication is important in our work. I don’t feel disrespected that he replied that way to my email, but I’d be horrified if he did it to someone senior to me or to one of our clients. It just strikes me as unprofessional. Am I overreacting? I don’t want to be a micromanager, but this does bother me. I think “horrified” is a bit much, but if you don’t want them to use that feature in certain situations, just let them know that! It’s perfectly fine to say, “I’ve noticed you using the Gmail thumbs-up response recently, and I want to make sure you know it’s fine with me but you shouldn’t use it with higher-ups or clients since some people will find it too informal for those contexts.” 3. When a company actively avoids naming a salary range, are they trying to lowball you? I applied for a job that might be a slight step back from my director level position now. I’ve had two conversations and a brief email exchange with HR where they keep asking me what I’m looking for, and I at one point politely but directly said I was looking for what they’ve budgeted for the position and how the bonus structure works and an overview of benefits as I’ve requested before. They promised before to send something and now committed to having someone call with the info. I suppose I can presume they hope to lowball someone, right? Otherwise why do this? This is a large, publicly traded company on NASDAQ. Yes, companies do this because they hope to be able to pay you less. They don’t always consciously think of it that way — it’s less likely that they’re rubbing their hands together with glee while they contemplate lowballing you and more that they think, “We don’t want to pay more than we have to, so let’s see what people are looking for” — but at the end of the day, it amounts to the same thing. They know the range they’ve budgeted. It’s not a mystery to them. They’re just trying to avoid telling you because they think that if they do, you’ll be more likely to ask for or expect the top of that range. 4. Who should be in the loop when someone is out on medical leave? Our office manager is upset because she didn’t know about another staff member going on medical leave (using FMLA). After some dramatics, I forwarded her the email sent previously letting her and the management team know about the employee’s upcoming leave. The office manager doesn’t need to know about the leave but insists on knowing absolutely everything. (She doesn’t manage scheduling, calendaring, or time off. She does manage another admin who manages scheduling/calendaring.) My boss scolded me, even after I showed her the email/paper trail. I suggested that the management team share major updates in a private, password-protected notebook since things were getting lost in email. This is a work approved, fire-walled notebook tool. She said that this was a violation of FMLA laws. I have whiplash from her aggressive stance. Sharing through email is fine but sharing in a password-protected notebook isn’t? Am I violating FMLA laws by sharing the fact that a staff member is on FMLA with the entire management team? To clarify, this would just be a note about their leave dates, not the “why” or any other details of their leave. It’s not illegal to share that an employee is on medical leave (or going to be out on medical leave), as long as you don’t share the specific reason for the leave (because that’s private medical information that FMLA requires be kept confidential from people without a true job-based need to know). It’s not clear why your boss is okay with informing the management team by email but objects to your password-protected notebook idea, but both would be fine under the law. It’s also not clear why your boss objected to you forwarding the office manager an email that she’d apparently already been included on originally. 5. What to do after being a misclassified contractor My mom recently got a new job after two years of being a 1099 contractor in an office. She was required to work in-office at specific hours for 40 hours a week, and had to request days off. She was also sometimes expected to be on-call over the weekend (not sure if there was any additional compensation). To me, there is no world in which this wasn’t a misclassification; they were treating her as an employee while paying her as a contractor (she paid her own payroll taxes and received no benefits). She also wasn’t the only one — there were at least two other women with the same terms. In an area with few opportunities, while she was employed it was too risky to raise the issue as she would have just been fired and lose the employment altogether. I know the next piece of advice is “hire an employment lawyer.” But can you give more information on what that entails and what that process looks like? Actually, in this case she doesn’t even need a lawyer. She can simply request that the IRS determine what her correct employment status should have been by filing IRS Form SS-8 (Determination of Worker Status for Purposes of Federal Employment Taxes and Income Tax Withholding). She’ll answer a series of questions about the nature of her work and the structure of her relationship with the employer; once the IRS receives the form, they will investigate and issue a ruling. It’s free to file it, and it’s fairly straightforward and absolutely worth doing. (She does need to factor in that her former employer will figure out that she did this, but it’s likely still worth doing.) That said, if she does want to talk to a lawyer before proceeding, here’s info on how to find one. 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how to say “sorry, but I really have to pee, again” in a professional way by Alison Green on April 15, 2026 A reader writes: I have a tendency to have frequent UTI’s. They’re easily treated and not dangerous, but they make my life annoying for 1-2 days before the meds kick in. I am not in pain but I might really, really need to visit the bathroom on a very short notice and very often, at worst every 15 minutes or so. At best, I’m fine an hour after I take the first pill. There’s no way to know beforehand which way it’ll go. I’m looking for advice on dealing with the problems this causes in my work; healthwise, I am fine and am working with my doctor to prevent the UTI’s as much as possible. But it’s a feature my body has had for ~25 years, so “not having them” isn’t a super reliable plan on its own. I have taken sick days for the symptoms, but it feels excessive because I’m completely fine as long as I can take a quick break when needed. I have also tried working from home, but that still doesn’t solve this problem because I manage multiple projects and frequently lead long meetings/workshops involving several departments and outside vendors. So I can’t exactly pop out without everyone noticing, and even when remote it’s unlikely I could discreetly just vanish for a bit. There’s also no point in having the meetings without me, since I’m the one leading them and doing most of the talking. I could always reschedule; people are very understanding if someone is unwell, and a quick “sorry, but I can’t unfortunately make it today” is enough info. But rescheduling usually means having to move the meeting by several weeks or months, which disturbs everyone’s work and delays the project timeline. It also creates unnecessary extra work for me, which I’d rather avoid! Ideally, I’d want to just keep the meetings so everyone can move forward with their life and work. But during these days, my options seem to be either to (a) suck it up (and risk ending up squirming on my seat like an anxious kindergartner), (b) randomly excuse myself from the meeting without giving any reason (and risk people worrying there’s something wrong), or (c) excuse myself with some variation of “sorry, I have a condition and might need to quickly pop out for quite a few times” (and risk people thinking I’m, I dunno, sniffing cocaine? Using AI to cover my lack of knowledge? Screaming into the void in the supply closet? Having stomach problems and about to accidentally infect everyone with norovirus?). I’m getting extremely frustrated that I have to cause all this extra work for myself and others for what feels like a very silly reason. I’m not in pain or even tired, I just might need to use the bathroom a bit more often and on a shorter notice than usually. What’s your take on this? Should I just learn to deal with the frustration? Or could I ask for some kind of an accommodation? I’m not sure what exactly that would look like. Or is there perhaps some believable excuse I could casually use to pop out of meetings when needed? Or, is there some professional script for “Before we start, just a quick heads-up that I might need to go pee quite often. Nothing to worry about, everything’s fine. Now, there’s been some national changes in walrus rental prices, so let’s look into that first…” At the start of meetings, say this: “Before we start, a heads-up that I may need to step out multiple times for a quick medical thing. It’s nothing to worry about, just something I have to deal with when it comes up, and it’s flaring up today.” That’s it! You don’t owe anyone details beyond that, and this gives them all the info that matters for their purposes. You may also like:how to deal with a stomach attack in the middle of a meetingwhat should I say when people miss meetings?is there a professional way to call BS? { 138 comments }
our mediocre employee thinks we’re not promoting her because of sexism by Alison Green on April 15, 2026 A reader writes: I’m hoping for some guidance on dealing with an employee who is convinced she isn’t advancing because she’s a woman, but it’s truly due to her putting in barely adequate effort and believing that advancement comes from checking off boxes and “time served.” We’re in a creative niche industry that’s fairly evenly split between men and women, although the larger industry that we’re a part of is still very male-dominated. Our company is a small privately owned company (under 50 people), roughly evenly split, with women at all levels, including in leadership. I’m a woman in the top level of our company and am involved in deciding who is ready to be promoted to the next level. We have a list of hard skills that people need to master at each level to advance, but there are also less easily quantifiable soft skill components, which get more important as people advance (we do have a list and try to give guidance on how to develop these, but it’s impossible to say someone has “mastered” creativity or client interaction, for example). The other more senior women and I regularly try to coach younger employees on strategies for dealing with the sexism that we unfortunately still deal with outside of the company, but in 20 years, there have been very few examples I have ever seen or heard about inside of it — and the few that have come up have been addressed immediately. One employee, Mia, has been saying she earned a promotion because she “checks all the boxes” on the hard skill list and she doesn’t like doing the soft skills, so they’re not important — and because of those things, the only possible reason she’s being held back is because she’s a woman. An accurate analysis is that she adequately performs most of the hard skills for her current level but never excels at any of them, hasn’t proven any ability in the next level’s hard skills, and is terrible at all of the soft skills (she’s gotten this feedback). Her “proof” of sexism holding her back is that a male employee who was hired a few months after her (and has been amazing in almost all of the skills) has received a promotion. (We don’t necessarily have a set number of positions at each level; we generally promote when we feel people are ready and take on more work to allow for the growth.) It’s also worth noting that Mia did a different role for the first year and was almost fired from that, so technically she has been in the same role as this man for less time, but she doesn’t think that matters. Two other women who have been hired since Mia are doing really well and are more realistically likely to step up before she does, assuming they continue their current trajectories. Overall, I’m flummoxed because her take on this seems to show a remarkable lack of self-awareness on her part. Mia is still an asset in her current role, although she’s becoming toxic about the situation around other employees, so I’m not sure how much longer we’ll feel that way. Do you have any suggestions on how to convey this is a performance issue that has nothing to do with her being a woman? I’m a little worried she’ll try to file a discrimination lawsuit if she leaves (it feels unfounded, but I don’t know much about the law). You can read my answer to this letter at New York Magazine today. Head over there to read it. You may also like:my coworker blames sexism when she's just bad at her jobI promoted one employee instead of her coworker, and now my whole team is upsetam I being a brat about not getting promoted? { 176 comments }
our meetings always start with a discussion of bad things that have happened to my coworkers by Alison Green on April 15, 2026 A reader writes: I work for a medium-sized, family-owned business. We all work from home. Some of us live in the same metro area but we’re not friends. We have an office culture of sensitivity and compassion when someone is going through a difficult time. For the last few months, every staff meeting somehow functions as an open mike for stories about horrific things that have befallen us, going back to the 1970s. I can’t give examples without needing a wall of trigger warnings. All are totally unrelated to the work we are there to discuss. We often end up with two or three people needing breaks to gather themselves, or being unable to pay attention when we do get to work things. I’ve tried interjecting, gently and then firmly, to redirect to a work topic but to no avail. Generally, it begins when we’re all coming into the meeting platform. Those who arrive early/on time will chat among themselves while waiting for the start. One person, when asked how they are, will express a minor problem before segueing into a more general complaint about the state of their life, which then is taken up by others on the team as a sort of prompt. For example, Regina has a persistent cold. She talks about her snot, her cough, what the doctor said, what she thinks about what the doctor said, how expensive he was, someone will agree with her, then a third person has a similar story, and Bob’s your uncle, we’re off. It’s not on the agenda officially. Lately, however, this is becoming formalized. Recently, another colleague had a “wellness prompt” for the meeting and started telling us about a time she was nearly very badly harmed, but made a good friend. We sat there for a 90-minute trauma dump. The next week, lo! “Wellness check” is in the agenda. Nobody likes to cut off the talking because it’s rude and insensitive. I’ve done it once or twice recently, and as a result, I’m getting some frost from my direct reports. Team morale has flatlined now that every gathering is the Misery Olympics, but our bosses are not reining this in. One of them participates. Frankly, I dislike the new office culture of constant overshare, and I despair of my bosses keeping our meetings productive. Do I say something, and if so, what? Or do I acknowledge I am not a good fit for the organization anymore, and try to find another job? Good lord. You said these meetings have agendas, so what is happening to the rest of the items that are supposed to be discussed? There’s a very high chance that you’re not the only one who’s frustrated by this! In addition to being a terrible use of time, these topics are probably making a lot of people uncomfortable (and maybe worse, depending on the topic and people’s own histories with related trauma). Can you talk to whoever is in charge of running these meetings, point out they’ve been veering into topics some people are likely to find highly painful, and you’re not getting to the business that you’re there to discuss? And if that person isn’t receptive, can you go above their head to someone else who might be? If that doesn’t work, I’m curious what would happen if you started joining early in order to very deliberately direct the conversation in a non-misery direction — talk about some exciting news on your team or in your life, or a (non-tragic!) movie you just saw, or some exciting news in the lives of your cats, or really anything that is far away from a trauma dump or an extensive exploration of snot. If it’s needed to keep things on a lighter track, go ahead and monopolize the chit-chat more than you normally might feel polite about doing and then when enough people have joined that the meeting is ready to start, ideally you’d segue into work topics — “now that everyone is here, I’d love to share what my team has done on X” or “I’m hoping today to get people’s thoughts about Y” or similar. You could also try messaging whoever runs the meetings ahead of time and asking for time on the agenda to talk about Non-Traumatic Work Topic X. Try all of this before you decide you need to change jobs! And even if this doesn’t work, I’m not convinced you need to change jobs over it, unless it’s really affecting your quality of life (it might be!) or it’s symptomatic of larger issues in how the organization is run (which it also might be). You may also like:we had to share our "shadow sides" and "be more vulnerable" at a meetingsomeone is always crying in our morning meetingswe have twice-daily mandatory group therapy at work { 132 comments }