Entry tags:
not a good day
I got in trouble at work today. I displayed frustration and wasn't professional in an email to a vendor; they complained, they demanded that they don't have to deal with me anymore; it went literally to the top of the company and I got a serious talking to, I thought I was being fired. I knew yesterday after I wrote it, that I fucked up. This isn't the first time I've been spoken to about my tone, whether verbal or in writing. I got heated and didn't stop emailing. (smack forehead)
NEVER MIND the back story. Where I work, it doesn't matter at all, nada. No matter that this vendor had our liquor license in jeopardy by being non-compliant, never mind that I spent a week helping them, so we could pay them. Never mind that they were unprofessional, rude and dense. Never mind that I discovered the issue, never mind that they didn't alert us to it. Never mind the hundreds of people I communicate with in a week that it's all good, I'm so helpful. Forget the $600K I was able to recover, it's not relevant. No matter. At all. I let anger out. I fucked up. I mean, my manager was incredulous. I felt like crap.
I sucked it up, I mean, I was rude, no excuses, BUT the way my manager's manager talked to me was brutal. I thought I was getting fired. I'm not sure I'm not, to be honest. It was horrible. I owned it. I apologized. I wrote out things I need to do, which I really do need to do to survive corporate America and earn a paycheck.
1. Do not write to the same person more than 2 or 3 times in one day. Let things slide. Care less.
2. Write in very short sentences, fragments if necessary.
3. Do not attempt or ever think I am educating anyone.
4. Do not keep Outlook up all day. Go in every hour or so, then shut it down.
5. Even though most of my work takes place communicating via email, dive into other projects, find them, invent them, research, etc.
I called my mom when I got home cause I wanted to cry. And because we are alike. We get frazzled, we don't let things slide, our words can bite, we're emotional, we're not political, we don't know how to negotiate very well. We're usually right, but have trouble communicating with certain types. We had an awesome talk. I feel better. Thanks Mom.
I'm trying to not keep things inside too much, like I always have.
I'm still crying a little, but it feels softening, healing.
I need my job.
I am exploring free lance opportunites, but I'm at the beginning of that road.
Please comment LJ friends. :-)
NEVER MIND the back story. Where I work, it doesn't matter at all, nada. No matter that this vendor had our liquor license in jeopardy by being non-compliant, never mind that I spent a week helping them, so we could pay them. Never mind that they were unprofessional, rude and dense. Never mind that I discovered the issue, never mind that they didn't alert us to it. Never mind the hundreds of people I communicate with in a week that it's all good, I'm so helpful. Forget the $600K I was able to recover, it's not relevant. No matter. At all. I let anger out. I fucked up. I mean, my manager was incredulous. I felt like crap.
I sucked it up, I mean, I was rude, no excuses, BUT the way my manager's manager talked to me was brutal. I thought I was getting fired. I'm not sure I'm not, to be honest. It was horrible. I owned it. I apologized. I wrote out things I need to do, which I really do need to do to survive corporate America and earn a paycheck.
1. Do not write to the same person more than 2 or 3 times in one day. Let things slide. Care less.
2. Write in very short sentences, fragments if necessary.
3. Do not attempt or ever think I am educating anyone.
4. Do not keep Outlook up all day. Go in every hour or so, then shut it down.
5. Even though most of my work takes place communicating via email, dive into other projects, find them, invent them, research, etc.
I called my mom when I got home cause I wanted to cry. And because we are alike. We get frazzled, we don't let things slide, our words can bite, we're emotional, we're not political, we don't know how to negotiate very well. We're usually right, but have trouble communicating with certain types. We had an awesome talk. I feel better. Thanks Mom.
I'm trying to not keep things inside too much, like I always have.
I'm still crying a little, but it feels softening, healing.
I need my job.
I am exploring free lance opportunites, but I'm at the beginning of that road.
Please comment LJ friends. :-)
no subject
I discovered that a social worker had inappropriately discharged a client from services, leaving him without medication, and had lied about him in case notes.
After consulting with my legal supervisor, I filed a complaint against the social worker with her supervisor and asked for appropriate disciplinary action.
The social worker complained to my ED, and I was written up and placed on probation for 90 days. I grieved my own disciplinary action, and even though the findings were reversed, I am still on probation, because the ED "has a sense" that my conduct was unprofessional. No word about how the problem will be resolved for the client, although I did find him other services, so he does have access to his meds now.
The thing that strikes me the most about both of our situations, and which was the crux of my own employee grievance, is that you don't operate a business on emotion. You rely on facts.
In my case, it appears that emotion is more important than abuse of clients. In yours, it seems that it is more important than $600K.
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-The thing you focus on will be the thing that expands.
-Everyone has a conditioning background of their own. I will let them be them. I don't have to control or change anyone.
-I don't deserve to be upset whenever my version of what should be does not happen.
-If you change your own steps, the dance can't continue in the same pattern.
-Detachment shows how much you care about yourself and you deserve that care. Detach out of love for you
-With each step in life, I can move closer to my goals or a step further away from them. I don't deserve to travel backwards. I deserve to take the good steps.
-There's a right and a wrong step to take or reaction to make. Take the step you know to be right even if you are not completely into it.
This really helped me. Take what you want and leave the rest.
I hope everything at work will be okay.
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It Doesn't Matter
It doesn't matter.
As Sharpie said, a business should rely on facts to set it's course.
When an incompetent vendor, customer, or colleague screws up we shouldn't react poorly but if we do, the facts should set the record straight. They should at least understand what the catalyst was for our action. Instead, the incompetent covers their mistake by making an issue of how we handled it.
I'm guilty as charged. There's a saying here and at my previous place of employment. "Don't let Don talk to the customers. He says what he thinks."
Honesty is not the best policy.
Molly mentioned her detachment. That's where 'It doesn't matter' comes in. When something bad happens here and I have no control over my job because someone else screwed up, I don't get uptight like I once did.
I say "It doesn't matter" and do what I must to fix the problem.
Being angry at that person doesn't help. The Bossman will do nothing to fix the root cause. No one will know what really happened because they're all floating around aimlessly like that plastic bag in American Beauty.
The more we care about our jobs and the results of our efforts, the more likely it is we'll have these episodes. The slackers never get upset. They don't care, and it doesn't matter. They get paid just as we do. So why do we care so much that we get in trouble?
I understand what you're going through. I believe you, I, and our LJ friends are birds of a feather.
I'll write to you about that writing thing another time.
Re: It Doesn't Matter
Re: It Doesn't Matter
thank you
I am very honored and grateful and feel tremendously lucky to have such friends as you in this community. It's amazing how palpable you are to me, although we've never met. Your words were the balm I needed today. I won't hear sincere statements like that from anyone I work with and I wouldn't burden anyone with that pressure anyway. The fact that we have all had this experience makes me more and more happy to know you and be a part of this world and fit. I'm going to respond to each post too, but I wanted to say thank you.
Re: thank you