Crying at work
RuthG
117 Posts
I've read a few articles lately saying that crying, once taboo at work, is now acceptable behavior in the workplace. I was wondering what all of you in the HR field feel about that.
Comments
As Tom Hanks said in A League of Their Own, "There ain't no crying in baseball" ... and there ain't no crying in the workplace!
While I believe that workplace crying for women should be avoided if we are trying to level the playing field (tying in with fisHRman's analogy), I think there are times it is acceptable--tears of sadness (death of a colleague, a retirement, etc.) or tears of joy (a surprise promotion, award, etc.).
We can't take emotion completely out of the workplace.
I remember a movie from a number of years ago when a character who was a news reporter started every day with a good cry as a kind of therapy--seemed to work for her. Although, I don't think we do ourselves any favors by breaking down in tears at work (with the exception of the situations IrisD points out).
At the same time, I know some managers who are brutal to their staff and one or the other is crying at least once a week. I don't think the problem is the ones doing the crying!
It's like anything else - depends on the who, what, where, when, how and why.