
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Holding in anxiety, anger, or despair for the sake of appearing professional can feel impossible. When the emotions are just too much—your boss’s dismissive tone infuriates you, a direct report unloads, you can’t hold back tears in a meeting, a tragedy happens and you’re leading an all-staff tomorrow morning—what do you do?
Liz Fosslien believes “the future of work is emotional.” The Amys revisit our 2020 conversation with her and fellow organizational consultant Mollie West Duffy about the good that can come from being vulnerable with colleagues, then Fosslien returns to help us reassess where the line between vulnerability and oversharing is today.
Resources:
Sign up for the Women at Work newsletter.
Email us: [email protected]
 By Harvard Business Review
By Harvard Business Review4.8
13651,365 ratings
Holding in anxiety, anger, or despair for the sake of appearing professional can feel impossible. When the emotions are just too much—your boss’s dismissive tone infuriates you, a direct report unloads, you can’t hold back tears in a meeting, a tragedy happens and you’re leading an all-staff tomorrow morning—what do you do?
Liz Fosslien believes “the future of work is emotional.” The Amys revisit our 2020 conversation with her and fellow organizational consultant Mollie West Duffy about the good that can come from being vulnerable with colleagues, then Fosslien returns to help us reassess where the line between vulnerability and oversharing is today.
Resources:
Sign up for the Women at Work newsletter.
Email us: [email protected]

8,872 Listeners

388 Listeners

1,456 Listeners

169 Listeners

1,034 Listeners

196 Listeners

743 Listeners

9,198 Listeners

106 Listeners

574 Listeners

806 Listeners

3,657 Listeners

1,388 Listeners

665 Listeners

77 Listeners

156 Listeners

81 Listeners