Culture HR Professional Calls Out How 'Dystopian' It Feels To Have To Do Our Jobs Amidst Tragedy — 'We Need Some Kind Of Catastrophe Leave'

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HR Professional Calls Out How 'Dystopian' It Feels To Have To Do Our Jobs Amidst Tragedy — 'We Need Some Kind Of Catastrophe Leave'​

Our country and the world have been through hard times before, but there's something distinct about the past few years that feels increasinly abnormal. Even many elderly people, who've lived through the turbulence of World War II or the Civil Rights movement, feel it — everything seems to have gone off the rails.

And we're all expected to just maintain the status quo through all of it. Going about our lives like normal. Logging onto work each day like nothing's happening, like it's just another day.

Amid the ghastly conflict that has erupted in the Middle East, the stomach-churning incongruity of just continuing to work through the horror feels even more pronounced. How are we supposed to continue doing this?

An HR professional thinks it's time for employers to take into account how 'dystopian' it feels to have to do our jobs amidst tragedy.​

Morgan Sanner, an HR professional and resume writer known as @resumeofficial on TikTok, recently shared her thoughts on this bizarre and discomfiting phenomenon that we've all been wrestling with for what seems like decades now.

But then, it has been in a way, hasn't it? The entirety of the 21st century has been one calamity after another. From 9/11 to the 2008 global financial crisis to the 2016 election and January 6, and all the innumerable climate disaster and mass shootings and political fights in between, it has been this way for so long — and we've all just been clocking in for our shifts and showing up for our morning meetings like normal.

"It feels so dystopian to look at the news and see all the awful things happen in the world and then open your computer and continue working like nothing has happened," Sanner said in her video.

Sanner thinks employers need to start recognizing how damaging this is to employees and make space for them to deal with it.​

"I think organizations need to start using some kind of catastrophe leave or something," she said, "because this is not normal to see something so horrific and then be expected to lead a meeting about marketing. Nobody cares about marketing right now."

She's certainly not alone in that sentiment. Social media is full of rueful jokes about this phenomenon, which just serves to underline how universal a feeling it is.

It feels so sickeningly incongruous because, in the end it is. We are human beings, not cogs in a machine, no matter how much our capitalist economy wants us to think otherwise.

It is, in fact, against our very wiring to simply turn away from atrocities and work on a spreadsheet. It feels untenable because it should be untenable. And it really might be time employers start taking that into account.

It is clinically proven that witnessing events secondarily online or in the news is traumatizing.​

It's not just your imagination, and it's not because we've all "gone soft" in recent years. Studies have repeatedly shown that exposure to the horrors that regularly blanket not just our news programming but our social media feeds is actually traumatizing us.

Scientists and mental health professionals call this "vicarious traumatization," and it means our brains quite literally cannot really differentiate between a violent image we see on a screen and one we witness firsthand. Worse still, a 2013 study found that in some cases it is actually more traumatizing to witness a traumatic event secondhand than it is to actually experience it yourself in real time.

The study focused on those who'd witnessed the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing in-person or who lived nearby, and those who'd only watched it on the news. It found that those who watched at least six hours of news coverage of the bombing were actually more acutely stressed than those who were there in-person.
And that's not all — the constant repetition of these images, whether from re-viewing them online or on the news, or from similar events occurring subsequently, means our brains cannot ever actually heal from them and find closure. We just carry around the trauma, day after day, piling them on top of each other.

Notice that none of this research focuses on children, the only group of people we ever seem to talk about with any seriousness when it comes to the impacts of social media. But it is barraging and damaging us all, even those of us fully grown and supposedly above such dangerous susceptibility. Protect your children, yes. But you must also protect yourself.
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So, no, it quite literally isn't normal to have to do our jobs amidst tragedy, and it's damaging our brains and mental health. It's time that we, our workplaces, and our bosses start recognizing this and making space for it. Because the way the world is cracking apart, it certainly isn't going to get better any time soon.

Sometimes, work has to wait. We are human beings, not spreadsheets.
 
The study focused on those who'd witnessed the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing in-person or who lived nearby, and those who'd only watched it on the news. It found that those who watched at least six hours of news coverage of the bombing were actually more acutely stressed than those who were there in-person.
You mean someone who stares at a disaster for 6 hours consooming every bit of coverage about it MIGHT have mental problems? Wow, no way!
 
Was there ever any doubt that this quoted "HR professional" Morgan Sanner would be an AWFL? Her LinkedIn page shows your typical slowly losing the battle of the waistline white professional woman
 
If a catastrophe happens nearby, companies usually let people take a couple days off. A catastrophe like an earthquake taking down the roads, a typhoon sending trees flying, or a flood taking out the office.
A """catastrophe""" isnt something thousands of miles away or muh weather
 
Her LinkedIn tells me all I need to know.

In time she'll settle down and realize her job is to keep management out of the courtroom and the resources from getting out of hand and shit.

Or, you know, get a real job.

About
I've had the same goal for years - I want to make the workplace better.

As a proud member of Generation Z, I aim to challenge the status quo within organization's HR teams to create a more engaging and inclusive workplace. I've grown to 50K followers across platforms in less than a year, and that's because this message resonates with today's workforce.

I also aim to align job seekers with organizations that fit their core values and future career goals. I've seen more than 1,000 resumes and nearly all of them struggle with one core problem: lack of confidence. I'm a firm believer that everyone deserves access to a confidence-boosting career coach, which is why I publish educational content in addition to offering resume writing services on a sliding scale. My goal is to change the narrative, and make sure that talented professionals aren't left in jobs they don't love because they can't afford career coaching and resume writing services.

Check out who I work with here: www.ResumeOfficial.com/Services
To see 500+ examples of my writing style: www.resumeofficial.com/resumebulletpoints/

Clifton Strengths: Competition | Focus | Significance | Futuristic | Command | Strategic
 

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I had to skim twice to make sure this moldy sinecure is talking about all types of employees and not merely their own useless occupation.
People who do actual work and produce real things are too busy to fuck around on their phones and get worked up looking at news or social media.
 
Holy shit lady, you are a fucking weakling, how the fuck do people function when they are such pathetic weaklings they need a day off over something that does not affect them in the slightest?

How the hell would she react if something actually bad happened to her personally?
 
Yeah no, you don't get a day off because you're sad about something happening somewhere else in the world
The Federal Gov't in Canada put in a new holiday for federal employees called truth and reconciliation day or something, for the bad things we (being Canada) did to the natives. So theres a holiday now to commemorate a nebulous situation. But no one actually does shit to commemorate diddly, especially since we are talking about gov't employees. This article and the HR guys suggestion just reminded me of this, because if people got time off for just the general bad vibes of the current era they're just gonna sit at home. Whats the point of that? That doesn't make anyone feel better. And not everyone would get time off, which just makes those in the servicr industry feel shitty over more time off that they don't get.
 
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HR is an "occupation" created by and for women, and this raging idiot is a perfect example of that.

The study focused on those who'd witnessed the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing in-person or who lived nearby, and those who'd only watched it on the news. It found that those who watched at least six hours of news coverage of the bombing were actually more acutely stressed than those who were there in-person.

Yes, I'm sure the suffering of someone whose legs were so badly mangled by ball bearings that they had to be amputated is nothing compared to yours, you stupid cunt.
 
The farmer must farm, lest there be no food. Theminer mustmine, lest there be no metals, coal or oil. Things need to be refined, transported, produced and delivered. The goings on in another part of the globe do not keep us from needing food, shelter and heat. Fuck the laptop caste.
 
Businesses should offer catastrophic leave... on a permanent basis.

Now that I thought about it, why do businesses actually hire HR people, as in people qualified to be in HR, instead of using it as a nepotism dump for useless interns?
 
There's two foot of snow outside and I physically can't drive my car through it, to get to work through treacherous, dangerous, icy roads and can't have a day off without losing pay

Yet HR take a day off, or 'work from home' IE sit in pyjamas all day and do fuck all, and nobody bats an eye lid.

In a day with modern computer systems, what are HR doing? HR and H+S departments could be rolled into one.
 
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Holy shit lady, you are a fucking weakling, how the fuck do people function when they are such pathetic weaklings they need a day off over something that does not affect them in the slightest?

How the hell would she react if something actually bad happened to her personally?
Counterpoint: She IS actually experiencing a catastrophe, and this shit just adds to the feeling of it. She just can't recognize that the catastrophe she's experiencing is her life, being a cunt, and working in HR.
 
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