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Bruno Almeida
Bruno Almeida

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Stop being a toxic person, start to have empathy.

On our daily work we usually share ideas, do some pair programming and conversation about problems we have to fix or something we're struggling with. It's normal, great and at the end the day/talk when you fix the problem or solve your doubt, is just amazing.

This kind of situation involves a lot of contribution, team work and the most important thing, EMPATHY.

A lot of people work together and at some companies there are a lot of toxic people who's there to bring other person down, although the toxic person even realize that behavior, he/she is there and is being bad for someone.

I've been working with toxic people on my entire career and the feeling of having a conversation with the person is almost always a bad thing, at the end of the conversation I feel sad and anxious because I can't do nothing to not create a embarrassing situation on my team or work.

This kind of people sometimes needs help, telling them to stops being like that and have empathy for someone is something that could help, not directly but talking with your manager/team leader is valid.

☔️ I'm telling that because I want to know from you guys if it's common at your work this kind of situation and how to tell someone that's being toxic to stops and start to be better? ☔️

(I know some people can't change, but a lot of people don't know they are toxic)

Top comments (2)

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ryansmith profile image
Ryan Smith

You are not alone in feeling that. Most of my experience has been with great people and having great experiences. It is the few individuals and the few times when negative attitudes came out that tended to really weigh on myself and others. These negative situations seemed to heavily drown out the positives, leading to a toxic environment.

I do not think you can change the way people form their opinions and express them, but you can change how you respond to it and how it affects you. For myself, I found that if I just sit there and take it in an effort to not cause conflict, it ends up causing me harm. Even if I was just a witness, the situation would stay with me and ruin my day. Having teammates afraid to speak their minds because of potential backlash makes every meeting tense and ineffective.

Doing something about it is hard and takes practice, but here are some of my tips.

  • Prepare. You may know typical meetings when others may be negative or you may see signs in passing that they don't like something. It is good to be mentally prepared for that to pop up.
  • Keep your emotions under control. Others may say things that make you angry. Let it pass before responding, otherwise, it could result in a conflict which may reflect poorly on you.
  • Be open-minded. Even though a person's position might be "I don't like it, my way is better" without much justification, there may be a good idea under that somewhere.
  • Seek information without being confrontational. If you believe someone is being negative simply because they don't like something, ask them for more information. "Tell us more about why you think/feel that way" is a simple question, but it forces them to justify their actions. This can take the burden off of their target.
    • I think the important part is not sharing an opinion while doing this. If someone is vocal about something, an opposing view may only cause confrontation. Ask questions and let them do the talking to justify their opinion and their attitude.

Through that, your teammates will appreciate you more. They may be more willing to speak up and share their thoughts because they know you have their back. The difficult individuals may also think twice about being confrontational since they know they are going to have to justify their position.

I hope this helps, hang in there.

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paddy3118 profile image
Paddy3118

I like your reply. I would only add that some have not learned that there could be more than one way to solve a problem.