Dealing with job frustration
LindaS
1,510 Posts
I'm wondering how all of you handle the compounding frustration brought on by your employees. I am becoming increasingly frustrated and find my patience level wearing thin.
I know that HR deals with many emotional situations and I try to assist the employees the best that I can but I am tired of being the one that is constantly the brunt of their anger. Whether it be following the safety regulations, attendance issues, performance issues, FMLA, leave of absence, etc. I am the one that gets the majority of the anger.
I try to come to work each day with a good attitude but usually within the first 30 minutes things take a turn for the worse.
How do all of you continue to put a smile on your face?
I know that HR deals with many emotional situations and I try to assist the employees the best that I can but I am tired of being the one that is constantly the brunt of their anger. Whether it be following the safety regulations, attendance issues, performance issues, FMLA, leave of absence, etc. I am the one that gets the majority of the anger.
I try to come to work each day with a good attitude but usually within the first 30 minutes things take a turn for the worse.
How do all of you continue to put a smile on your face?
Comments
Bring in some aromatherapy candles and a large box of dark chocolate... everything will be all right! Hope your day improves! xhugs
Also a nice cold gin and tonic can go a long way, or a tall cold one, even a glass of wine....at night :-)
Do you take a lunch? Do you leave your office? Get away even for just 20 minutes can do wonders.
My $0.02 worth.
DJ The Balloonman
PS Don't feel bad....I am having one of those weeks also.
Try telling yourself each morning when your left foot hits company pavement: "I can't wait to tackle this day. I hope I can solve just one people issue and make the company's bottom line better or somebody's day better. I will not allow myself to be negatively affected by negative vibes from others."
Don't be afraid to say, "John, you are aware of the work rules." Don't hesitate to say, "Joan, we've gone over that three times and I cannot change the benefits policy." Feel free to say, "Nicole, the policy is very clear on that. This was your third warning. I can't change that for you." or "Festus, the safety rules are what they are. You violated one, it went in your file, we move on. Can I help with anything else today?"
I don't mean to suggest that we should have hide as tough as a rhino, but a certain degree of impenetrable skin is essential for survival. And it varies from animal to animal.
The exercise suggestion is the best; I try to take a walk at lunch time every day unless the weather is real bad. I walk to work every day, its about a mile. The walk in the morning gets my blood moving and wakes me up, the walk home winds me down and allows me to get everything out of my mind and not take it home with me.
I try to get out of the office by 4:30 each day particularly during the time year when it is still daylight out. This means that since I normally get up at 5:30 am, I get to do a lot of the paperwork from home. My company subscribes to service called go to my pc, which allows me to use my office computer from home. However, it goes much more quickly because there are no interruptions (and that immediately means less stress). Finally, sometimes I just close the door, take out a tootsie roll pop and a very cuddly stuffed animal, close my eyes and relax for five minutes. Works wonders.
Linda, we understand.
I also close my door & let voice mail answer my calls a lot more often than I used to. I'm big on "open doors", but sometimes I just have to get a big project completed without interruptions, & that's what my closed door means.
And the older I get, the more value I place in something my dad, who was a very effective operations manager, taught me. He used to tell his employees "Your emergency is not necessarily going to become my emergency...Your crisis is not necessarily going to become my crisis... Your whatever (substitute whatever they're trying to dump on you)is not necessarily going to become my whatever." You'll save your sanity & be much more effective in your job by establishing some boundaries.
The other thing that I'm working on is getting our supervisors to take more responsibility (or accountability) for attendance issues and HR policies. I find they tend to want to hand all that off to HR - but really it's their department and they need to be responsible to know the stuff and run it.
I agree with the others, for a quick fix chocolate is always good!
- "When the goin' gets tough.................the tough get goin'"
Bluto Blutarsky
Thanks again for the support!
I am dealing with the exact same type of enviornment. Management has been to laxy daisy in the past and now they've created 115 hissy fit throwing children that I struggle with day in and day out. Some days are better than others.
If you ever need to vent, just look up my profile and shoot me an e-mail. I am always available to listen, compare notes and talk.
HRratrace, TN
Good luck and know we all have felt or are feeling what you are.
How's this for a giggle? We were going to close our offices Monday due to Hurricane Ivan-When the powers that be decided on Sunday that we could be open, we called the employee's in to work. Yesterday and today I have been fielding call's from ee's wondering what "BONUS" we would give them for coming to work??? I wanted to SCREAM "you will keep your job and we will pay you for the day!!!" Instead, I had a few ciggies (probably 3 or 4 packs) took a deep breath and told them with a smile that I would take their concerns to management and see what could be done...I then went home (early) and rode my jet ski for a bit-I raced that puppy as fast as I trusted myself to go, I yelled bad words and when I was done, I felt better. Do you have a jet ski? Maybe that would help:DD
After I got over my shock, he came slinking back to my office and said "I need some advice." I spent an hour and a half talking him off a ledge and getting him back where he needed to be.
Most meltdowns come from a culmination of frustration and it's always better to have a stress relief when you can. This guy keeps taking crap from his managers, solving their problems, taking on issues that need to be delegated, etc. He had just reached his boiling point.
I don't remember where I got my psychology degree, but it sure has come in handy!