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The cheese stands alone

Dear Prudence,

I have worked at the same organization for 10 years, and for the first 9 I loved it. I was (and am) pretty senior in title, and was deeply engaged in strategizing the future of the organization and the work we were going to do. Halfway through COVID, however, the organization went through a reckoning related to both racial equity and some workforce treatment issues—our constituents and some past and current junior staff revolted, our board conducted some investigations, and most of our senior leadership was let go—but not me. All that is likely for the best in the long term, but in the short term it means that most of the people I was closest to in the organization, and the ones who situated me where I was and were the best advocates for (and biggest fans of) my work, are gone. I find myself in fairly deep mourning about losing both my work friends and a set of people who valued and understood my work.

Our interim leadership is nice and competent, and is trying to right the ship, but also doesn’t either know me or seem to particularly value my work in the same way. It is possible that, as a vestige of the old regime, I’m actually being actively sidelined out of strategic dialogue, though that’s unclear. But what is clear is that major strategic conversations are occurring, and I’m mostly not at the table in the way I would have been. I want to be part of carrying forward, and think I have things to offer—but I find myself listless and disconnected, and often just caught up in cycles of thinking about what “could be happening” if the reckoning hadn’t occurred—and feeling more than a little like I can only try and ask how to be part of it so many times before I either look desperate or clueless.

My question is: How does someone faced with the loss of both human connection and a solid sense of place, positional influence, and value inside their workplace (but who is still there and doesn’t want to leave, particularly) move past the feelings of loss and mourning so that they can be an active part of what comes next, particularly when the “bright new future” that could be the outcome hasn’t come into focus yet?

— The One Who Is Left

Re: The cheese stands alone

  • Everything @banana468 said. Take your feelings about missing your friends out of it. While completely valid feelings, it’s not going to help you find your place with new leadership. 

    Look, companies don’t just fire their senior leadership for no reason. You may need to spend some time proving yourself, and while that sucks, it’s probably reality. If you want a future there you’re going to have to make your care and win people over. 
  • It's time to start looking externally. You're being put out to pasture. 

    There was a board investigation and most of these people were let go. The fact that you were kept on suggests that you weren't actively involved in what was happening, but the fact that you either didn't notice or didn't care about something that was so widespread suggests that you're probably not the right fit for leading this company forward. There's more to being a leader than just getting your work done. 
    I do also agree with this as well and with @levioosa's comments.  I'm taking LW at their word and agree that if LW was part of a more toxic work culture and is not embracing that the old way wasn't productive they aren't in that company for the long haul. 
  • You’re deluding yourself that you have a future there. You need to job hunt. 
  • I was just hoping this letter was really about cheese.
    Wedding Countdown Ticker
  • mrsconn23mrsconn23 member
    Knottie Warrior 10000 Comments 500 Love Its First Answer
    edited November 2021
    Yeah, the tone of the letter is off-putting.  LW's former leadership team wasn't laid off, they were fired for some serious BS that they participated in or allowed to run amok. 

    LW's attitude reads like it was all some sort of misunderstanding and LW is somehow a victim of the situation.  No LW, you would have been out on your ass too if they'd found anything that tied you to what went down.  The only thing you did is keep your nose clean. 

    I would bet money that LW has shown they don't want to participate in the new strategy and probably has a pretty 'down' or maybe even shitty attitude about all these changes.  The letter is very mopey and 'poor me'.  I'm sure it's bled into their professional life.  

    I'm not even sure if LW's got a chance to turn this around.  The new leadership probably doesn't want someone who was a part of the former leadership team where all these awful things happened, but for continuity and/or maybe even for morale, they kept LW.  But they may be (are probably) in a situation where they will be cut loose once new leadership feels they're no longer needed. 

    Also, LW should just get a fresh start somewhere else.  No matter what, I can't imagine having all of my colleagues and mentors taken away in one fell swoop. I've seen it happen in my company during major layoffs.  Survivors guilt is a real thing, but LW needs to be rational about this and find ways to move on from it. 
  • levioosa said:
    Something about this letter rubs me the wrong way. LW seems pretty flippant about “racial disparity and workforce treatment issues” and seems more focused on “wahhh, all my friends are gone and now I’m not being constantly patted on the back.” LW needs to move on. This isn’t the workplace for them. Perhaps some introspection might help as well. 
    That's exactly what I'm thinking. I don't want to speculate on what could have happened, but there was a board investigation and the majority of senior leadership was fired; it's not a minor or isolated thing. LW doesn't seem to give a damn about people who were hurt by this; they don't even seem to feel anything about not noticing or caring that it was going on right under their nose. 
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