• bpalmerau@aussie.zoneOP
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    9 months ago

    I think I’m referring to something much more difficult. In most of the places I’ve worked, if your boss says that the plan is… actually they won’t call it a plan they’ll call it a strategic direction… that we will all flap our arms and fly to the moon and mine the green cheese that is there, it’s not ok, even as a moon expert, to reply that the moon isn’t made of green cheese. That would hurt your boss’s feelings. They won’t say “It hurts my feelings when you expose my ignorance”, they’ll just say you have a poor attitude, or that you don’t know how to communicate.

    There are unwritten rules about how people need to restrict knowledge to themselves and those they trust in order to gain power. To these people, loyalty is more important than the truth, so in order to demonstrate that I am trustworthy, I have to at least appear to accept the green cheese strategic direction, even if I manage it by gradually using different words until the actual work that needs to be done is included in the strategic plan. To a neurotypical person this is just basic office politics and they just nod and say yes to their boss and work it out from there, but to us it hurts not to be able to speak the truth and discuss ideas openly.

    • Elise@beehaw.org
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      9 months ago

      You’ve had some shitty bosses. I’m totally on your side with this and would also say the truth.

    • F04118F@feddit.nl
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      9 months ago

      (Disclaimer: I am not really neurodivergent, though I am closer to ADHD and autism than most people)

      I would tell the boss about the problems with the green cheese strategy. Maybe not in a large group, depending on the setting. In a 1-on-1 meeting I wpuld tell for sure. But I would also get really miserable if I had to pretend it’s all great with the rest of the team while it clearly isn’t. I think most people in my profession (software engineering) would run away from bosses who are like that.

      Maybe this kind of office politics is ok on a management level, between managers. But good managers shield their team from this kind of cattle manure. At least in software, they do. Otherwise they’ll watch the talent leave.

    • derbis@beehaw.org
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      9 months ago

      Yikes. This isn’t a neurotypical/neurodivergent thing. This is a bad leader.