a question came up in MSFT's New Future of Work #NFW2020 about the role of anger in the workplace. My fantastic colleague Tawanna Dillahunt highlighted, as she generously has before, that only some people have the privilege of being angry at work. I think about that often.
But again, whether expressing anger in a workplace is *effective* is a separate question. I'll say (again) maybe there are contexts in which expressing anger is necessary -- otherwise, people won't pay attention, won't consider it urgent. But in other contexts...
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Expressing the anger (that one feels) just may not be an effective way to get heard and create change. At least that's how I feel.
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If people have spent months, years, centuries trying to be heard and create change, to no avail, then it's the systems that are not effective rather than that expressions of anger are not effective.
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