We grew up with the idea that you go to school and pick a career path and get a job and then for the rest of your working life, you have a boss. You do what the boss tells you to.
If the boss says jump, you jump! You might not like to do what your boss tells you to, but it's too bad: the boss is the boss, and you're not.

Why should one person tell another person what to do? There is nothing normal or inevitable about that.
Plenty of people don't have a boss. They work for themselves. They have enough clients that if one client falls out of the picture, there are plenty more to replace them.
You can have the same mindset even if you have a salaried position. Plenty of people do that, too. They take job offers like everybody else does but they negotiate an employment contract.
The contract says that if the people in charge don't appreciate the newcomer's style, they can say "Take a hike!" but then they have to pay up.

I grew up learning the same ideas. It helped me to get fired a couple of times before I was twenty. I saw that being fired is no big deal.
It's kind of pathetic when a fearful weenie says "You're fired!" and then you say "Whatever" and you go down the street and get another job in two seconds.
You realize that the people who need to put you down the most turn out to be your greatest teachers. You realize that you don't have to be afraid of anyone.

I was making bank for an 18-year-old. I got fired because I left the restaurant at ten p.m. to go to a club with my friend Dee Dee. We had both been scheduled for weeks to leave at ten so we could get to Times Square, watch the ball drop and then hit the club, called Ipanema.
Fifteen minutes before we were due to depart, a roving supervisor walked into the restaurant and said "It's busier than we expected. Everybody has to stay until 2:00 a.m."

People will try to define you and box you in and the only power they have over you is your own belief in their power. That includes supervisors, CEOs, condo association presidents and plenty of other people in your life.
You have to listen to cops because they can kill you. Everyone else can stuff it. If you are not their cup of tea, they're welcome to leave you alone.

Deep inside we know when we've fallen into a doormat state and it's a sensitive topic. We don't want anyone to call our attention to it. When they do, we bristle and say "You don't know what I'm going through!"
Everyone knows what you're going through because everyone has been there. I've sat through more hours and weeks of leadership development than most people have. I have never heard anyone in a leadership development course say "It can be hard to tell the truth in the moment. It can be terrifying. Let's practice doing that, right now."

No job can pay you enough to make it a good deal for you to bury your personality and pretend to be someone you're not. If you can't bring your whole self to work, you have several choices.
You can launch a stealth job search and start looking for something new. That will require you to grow some new muscles. You can start to speak up at work and tell the truth about how you feel. That will require you to grow muscles, too.

There are a lot of ways to grow your muscles -- but you have to start! You can't say "Yes" to every request that anyone makes of you. You can't try to please everyone around you.
If you read my columns you know that we have a business, Human Workplace. It's a business and a movement -- a movement to reinvent work for people.
Does everyone like what I have to say? Of course not! We get tons of mail that says "You're an idiot and don't know what you're talking about."

You can't avoid conflict. It will find you! You can't avoid making people unhappy with you. You have to look for the people who get you, even if it takes a long time.
You have to look inside yourself to understand what you were put here on earth to do. Don't let people bully you and mistreat you, whatever your relationship is with them or whatever their title is.

You can't grow your flame working for a fearful manager. If you're stressed out and ticked off when you get home from work, then your paycheck isn't enough.
Who can pay you enough to grind your teeth at night and get sick and ignore your children and your sweetheart because you never stop working and you never stop worrying?
It's a new day in the talent marketplace and the people who can make their own way are the people who claim their own power. They make their own way and they speak with their own voice.

They will run into it, but they don't have to bow down to it. They don't have to buy into it.
They don't complain about their situation -- they change it.
They take charge of their lives and careers and view the obstacles in their way as mental and emotional hurdles for them to surmount.
They don't accept an unhappy work situation as inevitable or predetermined. They're not afraid to leave a bad job or the wrong client without knowing what will come next. They trust in themselves and the universe.

It's your life. No one has your permission to boss you around, make you feel inferior or tell you how to live or how to work -- do they? What title and what paycheck would make that trade-off a good deal for you?
https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/dont-let-anyone-boss-you-around-liz-ryan
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