anii
homo-loving sonovagun
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2007
- Messages
- 901
- MBTI Type
- infp
- Enneagram
- 9
it's to the "original post" I was referring to.
D'oh!
I was hoping my grammatitardedness wouldn't show itself until much later!

it's to the "original post" I was referring to.
That is a letter I can see myself writing. Is she INTJ? Or INFJ?...This is how one of them finally decided to free herself from this clique. The backlash is already forming, I hope she can withstand.
I'm part of those unpleasant, confrontational, very T, goal oriented and self serving people.
Bullshit, I can only trust someone who has enough backbone to tell other people what he thinks. If you haven't got any enemies, that probably means you've never been honest to anyone.
You never know if an asshole or bitch will use some info to backstab you later.
The e-mail is problematic because it seems to broach personal issues (gossiping during lunchtime and a refusal to be in someone's company). But again, it's hard to factor in the e-mail and say where to go from there without knowing the reporting structure and without knowing how the e-mail was received in AF's Catty Woman World.
That is a letter I can see myself writing. Is she INTJ? Or INFJ?
I'm curious to know how this has progressed... any updates?![]()
I highly suggest that idealism be left behind... accept that is how things work and work back from there. Situations like this defy our normal social conditioning... it's all around us but we choose to ignore it for the comfort of our own mind.
For general stuff, I'd read "The 48 Laws of Power". The reality is that every situation is different... it's the ability to change approaches and the knowledge base/experience that will help, not a ruleset.
So, protean, you need to start seeing it as a GAME and don't let it get to you. See it as just play. Make fun of them and be sarcastic when you notice elements of the GAME if it can alleviate the pressure. Be as disagreeable as you can while remaining polite and not making mistakes. That is the key. And, never, never, ever, get openly angry or blow up. Keep your cool at all times or they will play the victims. Remember, what doesn't kill you makes you stronger so all this is a great learning experience for you and once you get the skills to cope with people like this... you'll be much harder to deal with.
I did not think she must only be one of those two types. The letter did not give enough information to determine someone's MB type. I was only asking because as I said, I could have written that exact letter, so I was curious if she was the same type as me. I am an INTJ/INFJ.LOL. Why do you think she must only be those two types? She's a textbook ISFJ.
Yes, I'm pretty sure you are, just as I don't think you are the type to play mind games.
Is anyone willing to admit to starting a game? If so why do you do it? Does this arise out of insecurity, entertainment, other reasons? I won't think you're a bad person if you do.![]()
I'd get rid of any player as soon as I find outI want people who want to gain power through competence, not their relationships with others.
This thread reminds me of why we need other types (and why I became so frustrated with that *other* forum).
What is "OP"?
The danger here, which doesn't exist with men quite the same way, is that women are expected to get along. She isn't playing by their rules. It's bad either way... there are no "male" advantages and nnot "female" advantages to the approach she took. (ie: what I posted originally for the male, but also the removal from the pack in the female one is similar to "not playing the game" and opens her up for "female" isolation and retribution).
However, that's why I'm curious what has happened. Every situation that I get to hear about helps me refine the strategy a little bit more.
[...]Two other people have "asked" her to write up the minutes for committees that they are the staff liaison for. I'm also a staff liaison and we're responsible for writing our committee's minutes. Yet they give it to her, tell her they need it in X amount of time and if she doesn't get it to the per their specification, the emails start getting CC'ed to the boss. I don't know if the boss is oblivious as well, doesn't care, or can't deal with it right now. I've told her to go to her boss and let him fight for her. Because part of her job description is "other duties as assigned," she's really caught between a rock and a hard place. She needs her boss to tell the other people in the department to get their assistants to to the work or give her enough time to get the work done.
I've written some updates in my blog thread. The Alpha Female actually moved to California not even two weeks ago. We think because she knew she was leaving, she felt comfortable being extra caustic to my friend.
Every office has a departmental mule. They do the difficult work no one else wants to do because they're either stuck in a position where they have to (my friend is the departmental admin assistant as well as the executive assistant to the director) or they're a pushover who doesn't know how to tell people NO. Unfortunately, my friend is a little of both of these. She doesn't want people to think she's incompetent or that the work is too difficult for her because she fears that will affect her standing with the director. She prides herself on the fact that she can do all these things, but they come at a high price. She's very stressed out, doesn't take time off from work to recuperate because if she takes a week vacation all the work does is pile up on her, and is underpaid. There's no relief.
It's sad to say but I've told her she shouldn't be so damn efficient. Once people see that you're reliable, work quickly, and you do good work they start to think that they can continue to give you projects. This usually is a good thing, in that people will start eyeing you for a promotion, but since there are a lot of older people with nice cushy paychecks and wonderful views of the Capital in my office, there's not much room for upward mobility unless they leave. Another person in her department has two assistants working under her and yet she gives my friend their work because she does a better job. And when my friend told her that she couldn't do a certain project you know what she did? She sent an email to my friend about the project and CC'ed my friend's boss as some kind of blackmail! Talk about intimidation!
Two other people have "asked" her to write up the minutes for committees that they are the staff liaison for. I'm also a staff liaison and we're responsible for writing our committee's minutes. Yet they give it to her, tell her they need it in X amount of time and if she doesn't get it to the per their specification, the emails start getting CC'ed to the boss. I don't know if the boss is oblivious as well, doesn't care, or can't deal with it right now. I've told her to go to her boss and let him fight for her. Because part of her job description is "other duties as assigned," she's really caught between a rock and a hard place. She needs her boss to tell the other people in the department to get their assistants to to the work or give her enough time to get the work done.
Office politics are universal.
I have to disagree here. Or perhaps I could say that office politics are as universal as human behaviour... however, it is clear that different groups of traits produce different individual and group behaviours. Women do have some significantly different factors than men, on average, and they do produce significantly different group dynamics. The three that I am mostly seem to impact on group dynamics is the higher emotional reactivity, agreeableness and ability to multitask. Invariably groups of like traits such of these end up having a very different social structure than the opposites.
The reason I say harmony is because the two of the three traits invariably cause groups of women to react far more negatively to slights as well as attempt to smooth things over. This causes deep undercurrents that are not easily seen from the surface. The danger in disrupting this status quo as a peer is significantly different than your position of letting things be until they need to be calmed down. You in your position are the balancing factor.
In this case the interaction between the two ended before it could run its course... which would of been the most interesting part of the whole thing to me. How well it would of run is only speculation.
(I agree with your advice for the way forward now... so long as she isn't seen as the enemy from the current staff. Otherwise it will continue along a similar path as I predicted, IMO... but her efforts should be to turn individuals to her side based upon over reactions from the others rather than targetting any single individual.)
The funny thing is that I learned about this when I had an Admin Assitant job in title and was invited to the women's "bitch fest" where they aired their grievances. A most enlightening experience and one I will never repeat. Groups of women like that are probably the singular most unpleasant pack of beasts on the planet.
On a micro level, especially in interpersonal relationships, gameplaying of some form regularly enter the scene. Once again, people deny that they do it, but it's so commonplace that someone has to be initiating the game.
Is anyone willing to admit to starting a game? If so why do you do it? Does this arise out of insecurity, entertainment, other reasons? I won't think you're a bad person if you do.![]()
The three that I am mostly seem to impact on group dynamics is the higher emotional reactivity, agreeableness and ability to multitask. Invariably groups of like traits such of these end up having a very different social structure than the opposites.
I understand what you're saying about the dynamics of female interaction. But those aren't the only influences at work in an office environment. One can choose to influence the dynamics around oneself: One can court key players, form cliques, use her position to dole out favors, call in a favor from her boss, etc.
Also, your analysis seems to be based on the assumption that PM's friend is a peer of the other women. A senior secretary in the office traditionally has the choice of rising above the petty infighting at the lower levels. In fact, I would advise PM's friend to court the other secretaries precisely from an attitude of being in a leadership position rather than being just one more peer. There's good reason that the senior secretary position is traditionally the Alpha Female position, and PM's friend should put that to use.
Again, I agree with what you say about the nature of female dynamics. But also I think that there are more factors in play than just the interpersonal dynamics of female peers alone. Some people choose to stand out, cut through the usual clutter of pecking order dynamics, and be leaders in one way or another. I've seen women do it plenty of times in office settings.
Right... I've scanned the thread and certainly before the impression was that she was a peer (and if anything, the alpha was a peer that used alpha power to dominate).
However, in my scan, I didn't see her having any significant power even from the later messages... Did I miss something or is that in the blog?
Actually the alpha female was demoted to her current position because she had an attitude problem and didn't work well with others. The person who took her position was promoted and had no idea of the boiling pot of shit she was dropped into. The alpha female has been riding her since she was promoted into her former position.
I'm friends with the one who as promoted
(my friend is the departmental admin assistant as well as the executive assistant to the director)
Departmental admin assistant and executive assistant to the director is usually a pretty prestigious spot.
In any case, in such situations I always put my money on the individuals with the big cohones (so to speak).![]()