By Jacqueline Stenson
Contributing editor
Updated: 5:54 a.m. MT Nov 27, 2006
The high-stress world of corporate event planning was getting to Mary
Tribble and her business partner. At times when deadlines were near
and clients were making seemingly impossible demands, the two of
them would turn on each other. Shouts flew, doors slammed,
teardrops fell.
"In conflict, I tend to retreat and cry, and she tends to confront," says
Tribble, founder of the Tribble Creative Group in Charlotte, N.C. "It
wasn’t very healthy."
The women were suffering from what psychologists call "desk rage,"
on-the-job anger that industry observers say is increasingly rearing its
nasty head in stress-filled offices and other workplaces across
America.
Some desk-ragers "go postal," screaming, cursing, trashing office
equipment, even assaulting others. But desk rage also manifests as a
slow boil that leads to gossiping at the water cooler, backstabbing,
poor productivity, abusing sick days, stealing supplies or becoming
irritable or depressed. Some people simply get fed up, stop
communicating, put on a headset and emotionally "check out."
Desk rage isn't something companies like to publicize, so there are few
statistics on it. But a 2001 survey of 1,305 workers, commissioned by
Integra Realty Resources in New York City, found that 42 percent of
respondents said there was yelling and other verbal abuse in their
office, 23 percent said they have been driven to tears because of
workplace stress and 10 percent said employees have actually
resorted to physical violence.
Corporate consultants say they're busy dealing with employees who
behave badly.
"I hear comments, more and more, like, ‘Oh my gosh, by Friday we
don’t talk to Tom because he’ll bite your head off’’" says Susan
Enyeart, manager for curriculum development at the National
Seminars Group, a division of Rockhurst University in Kansas City,
Mo., that conducts continuing business education programs and
conferences nationwide.
In August, her group introduced — by popular demand — a new
workshop titled "How to Manage Emotions and Excel Under Pressure"
that’s aimed at helping companies combat desk rage. Human
resources personnel asked for the course to help deal with office
temper tantrums and other destructive work behavior.
"A lot of people are in workplaces where they are being emotionally
abused and bullied and that can take a toll," says Paul Spector, a
professor of industrial and organizational psychology at the University
of South Florida in Tampa. "It's becoming much more socially
acceptable to be mean and nasty to others."
Anna Maravelas, a psychologist and self-described "corporate
peacemaker" in St. Paul, Minn., says she regularly sees anger,
hostility, rudeness and general inhumanity in the workplaces where
she consults. For instance, a corporate vice-president told her, "I pay
my people well, I don’t have to appreciate them too," and a bank
employee said, "Being nice here is seen as a weakness."
Never catching a break
A generational shift may be partly to blame for the rise in desk rage,
according to Enyeart, who’s been in the business for 20 years.
"People are more likely to wear their emotions out on their sleeves
than in the past," she says. The older baby boomers are retiring and
being replaced with a younger generation who’ve been brought up to
air their discontent.
And it’s not hard to find something to be unhappy with in the modern
workplace: heavy workloads, long hours and technology that keeps
workers constantly on call. "They never get a break from their work
responsibilities," says Enyeart.
With laptops, PDAs, cell phones, e-mail and pagers, there is an everwidening
gap between the amount of information people are expected
to keep up with and the amount they can reasonably process, says Dr.
Kerry Sulkowicz, a psychiatrist and founder of the Boswell Group, a
corporate consulting company in New York City. "The technology is
outstripping our capacity to use it," he says.
Management turnover, downsizing and outsourcing are other sources
of stress, making workers feel their jobs aren’t secure.
"We’re being squeezed," says Maravelas, author of "How to Reduce
Workplace Conflict and Stress." "We’re just burning out."
Stuff stressed workers in a crowded, noisy cubicle — in what’s been
termed the "Dilbertization" of America — and you have the recipe for
desk rage.
The people more likely to experience desk rage are those with the
least power, says Enyeart, those "who feel like they’re at the mercy of
everyone else."
But all of us, regardless of our standing at work, face frustrations, an
average of 30 of them a day, says Maravelas. It’s how we handle them
that matters.
When we become angry, our bodies "flood" with a rush of adrenaline
and other stress hormones that stay high in the bloodstream for two
hours and interfere with our ability to think straight. "We lose I.Q.
when we flood and other people get contaminated by it," she says. So
if something else happens to anger us within that two-hour window,
we’re less equipped to deal with it.
During times of flooding, people react in one of three ways. They
either a) blame others, leading to screaming and yelling, b) blame
themselves, leading to depression and self-loathing, or c) react
rationally (correct answer), realizing that stressful events are part of
life and findings ways to problem-solve and handle them.
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