[{"data":1,"prerenderedAt":-1},["ShallowReactive",2],{"$fRdy4Ph-Pr3_YSRANo4UELfNtlCWM9i03GPoJzUPa93A":3,"$fRt4huCvYs3wLVJ8rVut2M_rfyU25Gu5CVyqOEr7nMFQ":37,"$fkHtl9GyZFj8mjGqqvY1Sex-Fj06_unOrsz1uzHyqeBo":128},{"data":4,"meta":33},[5,9,13,17,21,25,29],{"id":6,"name":7,"slug":8},1,"Career & Finance","career-and-finance",{"id":10,"name":11,"slug":12},11,"After Hours","after-hours",{"id":14,"name":15,"slug":16},3,"Wellness","wellness",{"id":18,"name":19,"slug":20},12,"Style","style",{"id":22,"name":23,"slug":24},4,"Voices","voices",{"id":26,"name":27,"slug":28},2,"Mindset","mindset",{"id":30,"name":31,"slug":32},10,"Nourish","food",{"pagination":34},{"page":6,"pageSize":35,"pageCount":6,"total":36},25,7,{"data":38,"meta":126},[39],{"id":10,"title":40,"createdAt":41,"updatedAt":42,"publishedAt":43,"content":44,"slug":45,"coffees":26,"seo_title":40,"keywords":46,"seo_desc":47,"featuredImage":48,"category":92,"author":96,"img":125},"How to Change Careers: It's Never Too Late to Find Your Passion","2020-12-26T17:49:13.983Z","2025-12-12T19:14:40.261Z","2020-12-26T17:50:49.536Z","\u003Ch3>Many of us have pondered the question: Is the career path we&#39;ve chosen truly our calling?\u003C\u002Fh3>\n\u003Cp>Since childhood, we&#39;ve been asked, &quot;What do you want to be when you grow up?&quot;  The typical answers – doctor, teacher, astronaut – reflect the aspirations of youth.  By our late teens, we&#39;re often expected to make informed decisions about our future careers.  But what happens when, in our 30s or beyond, we experience a sense of unease, a feeling that something just isn&#39;t &quot;working&quot;?\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>You might find yourself constantly stressed, dreading work, and lacking a sense of fulfillment.  The routine feels suffocating, and you long for a change, a way to fill that nagging &quot;gap.&quot;  Often, the answer is a career change.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>The thought of switching careers can be daunting.  Questions flood your mind: \u003Cem>&quot;What am I supposed to do?&quot;\u003C\u002Fem> \u003Cem>&quot;Is it too late?&quot;\u003C\u002Fem> &quot;Am I too old?&quot; &quot;What are my options?&quot;  These questions deserve thoughtful answers.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>While a simple list of &quot;dos and don&#39;ts&quot; might seem helpful, it often falls short.  The common advice, &quot;It&#39;s never too late,&quot; and the Nike slogan, &quot;Just do it,&quot; are well-intentioned but don&#39;t address the complexities of career transitions.  The most challenging part isn&#39;t the execution; it&#39;s making the decision.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cimg src=\"https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fcareer_change_a455217589.jpg\" alt=\"career-change.jpg\">\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Why is it so hard to change careers?\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>Changing careers involves more than just finding a new job.  It requires leaving behind the familiar, adapting to a new routine, and often taking a financial risk.  It means venturing into the unknown, which can be scary.  You might be leaving behind years of experience and potentially a comfortable salary.  The fear of the unknown, coupled with societal pressures and financial concerns, can create a significant barrier.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch2>Overcoming the Fear and Taking the Leap\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>So, how do you overcome these challenges and finally take the leap? Here&#39;s a more in-depth approach:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Ch3>Self-Reflection:  This is the most crucial step.  Ask yourself:\u003C\u002Fh3>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cem>- What am I truly passionate about?\u003C\u002Fem>\n\u003Cem>- What are my skills and talents?\u003C\u002Fem>\n\u003Cem>- What kind of work environment do I thrive in?\u003C\u002Fem>\n\u003Cem>- What are my values? (e.g., creativity, helping others, financial security)\u003C\u002Fem>\n\u003Cem>- What kind of lifestyle do I want?\u003C\u002Fem>\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Once you have a better understanding of yourself, explore different career options that align with your passions, skills, and values. \u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>A great step would be to talk to people working in fields that interest you. Ask about their experiences, challenges, and advice. You can also make a thorough online research that can help you learn more about what you are looking for and what&#39;s like in the industry you are targeting. Utilize websites like LinkedIn, Glassdoor, and Indeed to research different career paths, job requirements, and salary expectations. Dont&#39; hesitate to attend industry events and connect with people in your target field. \u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>And, of course, \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F5-free-coursera-courses-to-boost-your-career\">consider taking courses or workshops\u003C\u002Fa> to develop new skills or gain experience in a new field. This way, you can identify any skills gaps and take steps to address them.  \u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>However, changing to a completely different field might involve:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>\u003Cstrong>Formal Education:\u003C\u002Fstrong> Returning to school for a degree or certification.\n\u003Cstrong>Online Courses:\u003C\u002Fstrong> Platforms like Coursera, Udemy, and edX offer a wide range of courses.\n\u003Cstrong>Self-Study:\u003C\u002Fstrong> Utilize books, articles, and online resources to learn new skills.\n\u003Cstrong>Networking and Building Connections:\u003C\u002Fstrong>  Networking is essential for career transitions.  Connect with people in your target field, attend industry events, and let your network know you&#39;re looking for new opportunities.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cp>Also:\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003Cul>\n\u003Cli>\u003Cp>Tailor your resume and cover letter to highlight your transferable skills and experience, even if they&#39;re from a different industry.  Focus on how your skills can benefit your potential employer in the new field.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>\u003Cp>Practice answering common interview questions and be prepared to explain your \u003Ca href=\"https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fsignificant-career-change-here-is-what-you-need-to-do\">career change\u003C\u002Fa>.  Emphasize your passion for the new field and your willingness to learn.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>\u003Cp>Start applying for jobs, even if \u003Cem>you don&#39;t feel 100% ready\u003C\u002Fem>.  The more you put yourself out there, the more opportunities will come your way.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003Cli>\u003Cp>Changing careers is a journey, not a destination.  Be patient, persistent, and don&#39;t be afraid to ask for help along the way.\u003C\u002Fp>\n\u003C\u002Fli>\n\u003C\u002Ful>\n\u003Ch2>The &quot;Glad I Did It&quot; Moment:\u003C\u002Fh2>\n\u003Cp>The path to a new career may be challenging, but the rewards can be immense.  Imagine waking up excited to go to work, feeling fulfilled by your contributions, and knowing that you&#39;re finally doing what you were meant to do.  That \u003Cem>&quot;glad I did it&quot;\u003C\u002Fem> moment is within reach.  It requires courage, self-reflection, and a willingness to embrace change.  But the payoff – a career that aligns with your passions and purpose – is well worth the effort.\u003C\u002Fp>\n","how-to-change-careers","how to change careers at any age, career change advice for women, professional reinvention, transitioning to a new job, mid-career change, pivoting careers later in life, finding your passion","Ready for a change? We give you the step-by-step guide to successfully change careers, identify your passion, and prove that it's never too late for professional reinvention.",{"id":49,"name":50,"alternativeText":51,"caption":51,"width":52,"height":53,"formats":54,"hash":86,"ext":56,"mime":59,"size":87,"url":88,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":90,"updatedAt":91},20,"how to change careers.jpg","how to change careers",1600,900,{"large":55,"small":65,"medium":72,"thumbnail":79},{"ext":56,"url":57,"hash":58,"mime":59,"name":60,"path":61,"size":62,"width":63,"height":64},".jpg","https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_career_change_86abdc01ac.jpg","large_career_change_86abdc01ac","image\u002Fjpeg","large_career-change.jpg",null,44.39,1000,563,{"ext":56,"url":66,"hash":67,"mime":59,"name":68,"path":61,"size":69,"width":70,"height":71},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_career_change_86abdc01ac.jpg","small_career_change_86abdc01ac","small_career-change.jpg",14.46,500,281,{"ext":56,"url":73,"hash":74,"mime":59,"name":75,"path":61,"size":76,"width":77,"height":78},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_career_change_86abdc01ac.jpg","medium_career_change_86abdc01ac","medium_career-change.jpg",26.33,750,422,{"ext":56,"url":80,"hash":81,"mime":59,"name":82,"path":61,"size":83,"width":84,"height":85},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_career_change_86abdc01ac.jpg","thumbnail_career_change_86abdc01ac","thumbnail_career-change.jpg",5.55,245,138,"career_change_86abdc01ac",107,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fcareer_change_86abdc01ac.jpg","aws-s3","2020-12-26T17:50:44.163Z","2025-02-22T08:37:15.813Z",{"id":6,"name":7,"slug":8,"createdAt":93,"updatedAt":94,"publishedAt":95},"2020-12-24T19:15:38.145Z","2020-12-24T19:15:38.158Z","2024-06-26T07:27:59.419Z",{"id":26,"name":97,"slug":98,"instagram":99,"facebook":100,"bio":101,"createdAt":102,"updatedAt":103,"publishedAt":104,"linkedIn":105,"avatar":106,"avatarImg":124},"Tonia","tonia","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.instagram.com\u002Fliolioutonia\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.facebook.com\u002Ftonia.lioliou","If you could find one person combining physical strength and mental ability it would have her name. Tonia is also a teacher, but she has serious experience in all kinds of jobs. She can do whatever you ask her. She is also a big fan of remote work -and she is not afraid to admit it. This is why she loves writing about it.","2020-12-24T18:57:03.277Z","2022-03-04T12:40:41.173Z","2020-12-24T18:57:04.381Z","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.linkedin.com\u002Fin\u002Ftonia-lioliou-078949202\u002F",{"id":26,"name":107,"alternativeText":108,"caption":108,"width":109,"height":109,"formats":110,"hash":119,"ext":112,"mime":115,"size":120,"url":121,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":122,"updatedAt":123},"the working gal author.png","the working gal author",250,{"thumbnail":111},{"ext":112,"url":113,"hash":114,"mime":115,"name":116,"path":61,"size":117,"width":118,"height":118},".png","https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_tonia_614def26ea.png","thumbnail_tonia_614def26ea","image\u002Fpng","thumbnail_tonia.png",52.63,156,"tonia_614def26ea",111.31,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Ftonia_614def26ea.png","2020-12-24T18:57:01.136Z","2025-02-22T08:34:14.859Z","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Ftonia_614def26ea.png","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fcareer_change_86abdc01ac.jpg",{"pagination":127},{"page":6,"pageSize":35,"pageCount":6,"total":6},{"data":129,"meta":380},[130,196,242,290,335],{"id":30,"title":131,"createdAt":132,"updatedAt":133,"publishedAt":134,"content":135,"slug":136,"coffees":14,"seo_title":137,"keywords":138,"seo_desc":139,"featuredImage":140,"category":170,"author":173,"img":195},"How Gender Affects the Way We Communicate at Work (And What to Do About It)","2020-12-26T17:27:39.060Z","2025-12-12T19:11:42.671Z","2020-12-26T17:27:42.641Z","Have you ever been told you apologize too much? That you should speak more directly? That you need to be more assertive? If you're a woman in the workplace, chances are you've received feedback like this—and wondered whether something was actually wrong with how you communicate, or whether the problem lies elsewhere.\n\nThe relationship between gender and language is complex. Research spanning decades has documented that men and women often communicate differently—in their word choices, speech patterns, nonverbal cues, and conversational goals. But understanding *why* these differences exist, and how they're perceived in professional settings, matters far more than simply cataloging them.\n\nThe uncomfortable truth is that workplaces were largely designed around male communication norms. When women speak in ways that feel natural and effective to them, they're often judged against a standard they had no part in creating. The goal isn't to \"fix\" how women communicate—it's to understand the landscape and navigate it strategically.\n\n## Where These Differences Come From\n\nGender differences in communication aren't hardwired from birth. They're learned—absorbed from childhood through socialization, cultural expectations, and the different ways boys and girls are taught to interact with the world.\n\nLinguist Deborah Tannen, whose research on gender and language has been influential for decades, explains that boys and girls grow up in what amount to different linguistic cultures. Boys typically learn to use language to establish status, display knowledge, and compete for attention. Girls learn to use language to build connection, create intimacy, and maintain social harmony.\n\nThese patterns continue into adulthood. By the time we enter the workplace, we've internalized communication styles that feel natural but carry different implications depending on our gender. Neither style is inherently better—they're simply different, shaped by different social expectations and goals.\n\nThe problem arises when one style is treated as the default and the other is judged as deficient.\n\n## Common Gendered Communication Patterns\n\nBefore we go further, an important caveat: these are tendencies observed in research, not universal rules. Individual variation is enormous, and many people communicate in ways that don't align with their gender's typical patterns. Use these observations as a lens for understanding, not a box for categorizing.\n\n### Directness vs. Collaborative Language\n\nMen tend to favor direct statements: \"We need to change the timeline.\" Women more often use collaborative framing: \"What if we considered adjusting the timeline?\" or \"I think we might need to look at the timeline.\"\n\nWomen's phrasing isn't uncertainty—it's an invitation to dialogue. It leaves room for input, saves face for others who might disagree, and builds consensus. But in workplace settings where directness is prized, this collaborative approach can be misread as indecisiveness or [lack of confidence](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fconfidence-gap-women-underestimate-their-abilities).\n\n### Tag Questions and Hedging Language\n\nWomen are more likely to use tag questions—\"This approach makes sense, doesn't it?\"—and hedging phrases like \"I think,\" \"I feel like,\" or \"sort of.\" Linguist Robin Lakoff first documented this pattern in the 1970s, and subsequent research has consistently confirmed it.\n\nThese linguistic features serve a purpose: they invite agreement, soften potential conflict, and acknowledge that others might have valid perspectives. But they can also be interpreted as a sign of weakness or uncertainty, especially by those unfamiliar with the intent behind them.\n\n### Apologizing and Softening\n\n\"Sorry, but I have a question.\" \"Sorry to bother you.\" \"I'm sorry, I don't think that's quite right.\" Women apologize more frequently than men—not because they've done more wrong, but because \"sorry\" often functions as a social lubricant rather than a genuine apology.\n\nWhen a woman says, \"Sorry, can I add something?\" she's typically not actually apologizing. She's signaling politeness, acknowledging she's taking up space, and smoothing the interaction. The problem is that listeners may take the apology at face value, inferring that she's less confident or less entitled to speak.\n\n### Active Listening Signals\n\nWomen tend to show engagement more actively during conversations—nodding, maintaining eye contact, using verbal affirmations like \"mm-hmm,\" \"right,\" or \"I see.\" These signals communicate attention and respect for the speaker.\n\nMen are more likely to listen without these visible cues, which can make women feel unheard or dismissed. Conversely, women's active listening can be misinterpreted as agreement when it's simply acknowledgment.\n\n## Conversational Goals: Status vs. Connection\n\n[Research consistently shows](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.sciencedirect.com\u002Fscience\u002Farticle\u002Fpii\u002FS2352250X21001901) that men often approach conversation as an opportunity to establish or maintain status—demonstrating expertise, challenging ideas, and positioning themselves in a hierarchy. Women more often approach conversation as an opportunity to build connection—sharing experiences, finding common ground, and supporting others' contributions.\n\nNeither goal is wrong. But when these different orientations meet in a professional setting, misunderstandings can arise. A man who challenges an idea might see himself as engaging productively; a woman receiving that [challenge](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Freal-stories-my-biggest-challenge-at-work) might experience it as dismissive. A woman who shares a personal anecdote to connect might see herself as building rapport; a man listening might wonder what the point is.\n\n## How This Plays Out in the Workplace\n\nUnderstanding these patterns matters because they have real consequences for women's professional lives.\n\n### Being Interrupted and Talked Over\n\nStudies consistently show that [women are interrupted more frequently than men](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.advisory.com\u002Fdaily-briefing\u002F2017\u002F07\u002F07\u002Fmen-interrupting-women), both by men and by other women. In mixed-gender meetings, men speak more and for longer periods. Women's contributions are more likely to be attributed to someone else or forgotten entirely.\n\nThe pandemic made this worse in some ways—a [New York Times article](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.nytimes.com\u002F2020\u002F04\u002F14\u002Fus\u002Fzoom-meetings-gender.html) documented women's struggles to be heard in virtual meetings, where the lack of nonverbal cues and the ease of muting created new barriers.\n\n### The Double Bind\n\nWomen in professional settings often face an impossible choice: communicate in traditionally \"feminine\" ways and be seen as likeable but not [leadership material](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwhy-women-are-underrepresented-in-leadership-positions), or communicate in traditionally \"masculine\" ways and be seen as competent but unlikeable.\n\nA woman who speaks directly may be labeled aggressive or abrasive. A woman who speaks collaboratively may be labeled indecisive or uncertain. The same behaviors that earn men respect can earn women criticism. This double bind is one of the most persistent challenges facing professional women.\n\n### Credit and Visibility\n\nWomen's communication styles can inadvertently obscure their contributions. When a woman says \"We accomplished this\" instead of \"I accomplished this,\" or frames her achievement as a question rather than a statement, she may be perceived as less central to the success—even when she drove it.\n\n![words-discrimation.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fwords_discrimation_27a5de13c4.jpg)\n\nSimilarly, women who share credit generously or downplay their expertise may find themselves passed over for opportunities that go to [colleagues](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F5-toxic-phrases-used-by-colleagues-with-a-huge-ego) who communicate their value more assertively.\n\n## What You Can Do: Strategies That Actually Help\n\nThe answer isn't to completely overhaul how you communicate—that's exhausting, inauthentic, and often backfires. The answer is strategic awareness: understanding how your [communication](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F4-hacks-for-effective-communication-in-the-workplace) might be perceived and making intentional choices about when to adapt and when to stay true to your natural style.\n\n### Know When Directness Matters\n\nIn high-stakes situations—negotiations, [presentations to leadership](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fmiranda-priestly-management-style), critical feedback—directness often serves you better. Practice stating your position clearly: \"I recommend we pursue Option A because...\" rather than \"I was kind of thinking maybe Option A might work?\" Save the collaborative framing for contexts where it's genuinely useful.\n\n### Audit Your Apologies\n\nPay attention to when you say \"sorry\" and ask whether an apology is actually warranted. \"Sorry to interrupt,\" when you have a critical contribution isn't serving you—try \"I want to add something important\" instead. Reserve apologies for genuine mistakes, and replace the reflexive “sorry\" with more neutral phrases.\n\n### Claim Your Work\n\nPractice talking about your contributions using \"I\" language. \"I led this project.\" \"I developed this strategy.\" \"My analysis showed...\" This isn't arrogance—it's accuracy. You can acknowledge your team while still making your role visible.\n\n### Amplify Other Women\n\nWhen a woman makes a good point in a meeting, reinforce it: \"I think Sarah's point about the timeline is important—can we explore that?\" This amplification strategy, which gained attention when women in the Obama White House adopted it, helps ensure contributions don't get lost or attributed to others.\n\n### Choose Your Battles\n\nYou don't have to adapt your communication style in every situation. Sometimes the most powerful thing you can do is communicate authentically and let your competence speak for itself. Save your strategic adjustments for moments when they'll have the most impact.\n\n## The Bigger Picture: It's Not Just About Individual Choices\n\nWhile individual strategies can help, it's important to acknowledge that the real problem isn't women's communication styles—it's a workplace culture that treats male communication norms as the default.\n\nOrganizations can address this by training all employees to recognize gendered communication patterns and their own biases, creating meeting structures that ensure everyone's voice is heard, and evaluating people on outcomes rather than on whether their communication style matches a particular template.\n\nAs linguist Deborah Tannen puts it: *\"The biggest mistake is believing there is one right way to listen, to talk, to have a conversation—or a relationship.\"*\n\nLanguage isn't inherently [sexist](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F10-sexist-quotes-every-woman-has-heard-1). But the way we interpret language—and the assumptions we make about speakers based on their style—often is. Changing that requires awareness from everyone, not just the women being asked to adapt.\n\n## FAQs About Gender and Communication\n\n### Are gender differences in communication biological or learned?\n\nPrimarily learned. While there may be some biological influences, research strongly suggests that communication differences are shaped by socialization, cultural expectations, and learned behaviors from childhood onward.\n\n### Should women change how they communicate to succeed at work?\n\nNot wholesale. Strategic adaptation in specific contexts can be helpful, but fundamentally changing your communication style is exhausting and often backfires. The goal is awareness and intentional choice, not constant code-switching.\n\n### Why do women apologize more than men?\n\nWomen often use \"sorry\" as a social lubricant rather than a genuine apology—it's a way of softening requests, acknowledging they're taking up space, or smoothing interactions. The issue isn't the apology itself but how it's interpreted by listeners.\n\n### How can I speak up more in meetings without being seen as aggressive?\n\nFocus on your content and delivery rather than worrying about perception. Speak clearly and confidently, ground your contributions in facts and expertise, and remember that some people will judge you no matter what—don't let that silence you.\n\n### What is the 'double bind' for women in communication?\n\nThe double bind refers to women facing contradictory expectations: communicate in traditionally feminine ways and be seen as likeable but not leader material, or communicate in traditionally masculine ways and be seen as competent but unlikeable. It's a no-win situation rooted in biased expectations.\n\n### How can men be better allies in workplace communication?\n\nNotice when women are interrupted and redirect attention back to them. Attribute ideas accurately. Create space for different communication styles. Examine your own assumptions about what \"confident\" or \"competent\" communication looks like.\n\n### Related Reading:\n\n• [Are You Suffering from Impostor Syndrome?](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-deal-with-impostor-syndrome)\n\n• [How to Handle Criticism at Work](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fcriticism-at-the-workplace-can-you-handle-it)\n\n• [She Took Over Her Family Business at 18: A Young Woman on Proving Herself](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Finterview-an-inspirational-young-entrepreneur)\n\n### Further Reading:\n\n• [Deborah Tannen \\- \"You Just Don't Understand: Women and Men in Conversation\"](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.deborahtannen.com\u002Fyou-just-dont-understand)\n\n• [Harvard Business Review \\- Women, Find Your Voice](https:\u002F\u002Fhbr.org\u002F2014\u002F06\u002Fwomen-find-your-voice)\n\n• [Robin Lakoff \\- \"Language and Woman's Place\" (foundational research)](https:\u002F\u002Fweb.stanford.edu\u002Fclass\u002Flinguist156\u002FLakoff_1973.pdf)\n\n\n\n","how-language-is-affected-by-our-gender","How Language is Affected by our Gender?","gender and communication, gender differences in language, women communication workplace, how gender affects communication, gendered language patterns, women speaking at work","Explore how gender shapes communication styles in the workplace. Learn why women's speech patterns are often misinterpreted—and strategies for being heard.\n",{"id":141,"name":142,"alternativeText":143,"caption":143,"width":52,"height":53,"formats":144,"hash":165,"ext":56,"mime":59,"size":166,"url":167,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":168,"updatedAt":169},19,"language based on gender.jpg","language based on gender",{"large":145,"small":150,"medium":155,"thumbnail":160},{"ext":56,"url":146,"hash":147,"mime":59,"name":148,"path":61,"size":149,"width":63,"height":64},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a.jpg","large_language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a","large_language-discrimination.jpg",60.23,{"ext":56,"url":151,"hash":152,"mime":59,"name":153,"path":61,"size":154,"width":70,"height":71},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a.jpg","small_language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a","small_language-discrimination.jpg",19.41,{"ext":56,"url":156,"hash":157,"mime":59,"name":158,"path":61,"size":159,"width":77,"height":78},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a.jpg","medium_language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a","medium_language-discrimination.jpg",36.76,{"ext":56,"url":161,"hash":162,"mime":59,"name":163,"path":61,"size":164,"width":84,"height":85},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a.jpg","thumbnail_language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a","thumbnail_language-discrimination.jpg",6.08,"language_discrimination_2b309b0f4a",128.76,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flanguage_discrimination_2b309b0f4a.jpg","2020-12-26T17:27:29.640Z","2025-02-22T08:36:53.798Z",{"id":22,"name":23,"slug":24,"createdAt":171,"updatedAt":172,"publishedAt":95},"2020-12-24T19:16:11.810Z","2025-10-01T19:49:12.086Z",{"id":14,"name":174,"slug":175,"instagram":176,"facebook":177,"bio":178,"createdAt":179,"updatedAt":180,"publishedAt":181,"linkedIn":182,"avatar":183},"Amalia","amalia","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.instagram.com\u002Famalia.ka__\u002F","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.facebook.com\u002Famalia.kakampakou","Amalia is the Teacher. She loves what she does. She is addicted to detail: if it isn’t perfect, it’s not good enough. She loves her job and she loves writing. She wants to learn new things and she is very curious about everything. Her favorite question: Why? She usually answers the questions by herself, though.","2020-12-24T18:58:59.684Z","2020-12-27T14:58:33.474Z","2020-12-24T18:59:01.010Z","https:\u002F\u002Fwww.linkedin.com\u002Fin\u002Famalia-kakampakou-963945202\u002F",{"id":14,"name":107,"alternativeText":108,"caption":108,"width":109,"height":109,"formats":184,"hash":190,"ext":112,"mime":115,"size":191,"url":192,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":193,"updatedAt":194},{"thumbnail":185},{"ext":112,"url":186,"hash":187,"mime":115,"name":188,"path":61,"size":189,"width":118,"height":118},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_amalia_fcd74699a4.png","thumbnail_amalia_fcd74699a4","thumbnail_amalia.png",57.6,"amalia_fcd74699a4",118.47,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Famalia_fcd74699a4.png","2020-12-24T18:58:30.657Z","2025-02-22T08:34:20.998Z","https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Flanguage_discrimination_2b309b0f4a.jpg",{"id":197,"title":198,"createdAt":199,"updatedAt":200,"publishedAt":201,"content":202,"slug":203,"coffees":14,"seo_title":198,"keywords":204,"seo_desc":205,"featuredImage":206,"category":236,"author":237,"img":241},9,"12 Benefits of Working From Home (And How to Make Remote Work Actually Work for You)","2020-12-26T17:11:40.423Z","2025-12-11T23:58:40.298Z","2020-12-26T17:11:45.602Z","A few years ago, working from home felt like a distant dream for most professionals—something reserved for freelancers, entrepreneurs, or those lucky few with exceptionally flexible employers. Then everything changed. What started as a necessity became a preference, and now remote work has fundamentally reshaped how we think about where and how we do our jobs.\n\nAccording to [Pew Research Center](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.pewresearch.org\u002Fshort-reads\u002F2023\u002F03\u002F30\u002Fabout-a-third-of-us-workers-who-can-work-from-home-do-so-all-the-time\u002F), nearly 60% of workers with jobs that can be done remotely are now working from home all or most of the time. And it's not just because they have to—it's because they want to. A [Buffer survey](https:\u002F\u002Fbuffer.com\u002Fstate-of-remote-work\u002F2023) found that 98% of remote workers would like to continue working remotely, at least some of the time, for the rest of their careers.\n\nBut working from home isn't all pajama pants and midday yoga sessions. Like any work arrangement, it comes with genuine advantages and real challenges. Understanding both—and knowing how to maximize the benefits while navigating the downsides—is what separates people who thrive remotely from those who struggle.\n\nHere's an honest look at what working from home actually offers, and how to make it work for you.\n\n## The Real Benefits of Working From Home\n\n### 1\\. You Get Your Time Back\n\nThe average American commute is about 27 minutes each way—that's nearly an hour every day, or roughly 200 hours per year, spent getting to and from work. When you work from home, that time is yours again.\n\n![benefits of working from home](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fbenefits_of_working_from_home_d11ca03b59.webp)\n\nThose reclaimed hours add up quickly. You could use them to sleep a little longer, exercise, spend time with family, [pursue a hobby](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhobby-and-personality), or simply start your workday feeling calmer instead of frazzled from traffic. For many remote workers, eliminating the commute is the single biggest quality-of-life improvement.\n\n### 2\\. Greater Flexibility in How You Structure Your Day\n\nWorking from home often means more control over your schedule. Need to take a midday break for a dentist appointment? No problem. Want to start early so you can pick up your kids from school? Doable. Prefer to tackle deep work in the morning and handle meetings in the afternoon? You can design your day around your natural rhythms.\n\nThis flexibility is particularly valuable for women juggling professional responsibilities with caregiving, household management, or simply the mental load that comes with keeping a life running. Remote work doesn't eliminate those demands, but it does make them easier to manage.\n\n### 3\\. Significant Cost Savings\n\nWorking from home can save you thousands of dollars annually. According to FlexJobs, remote workers save an average of $6,000 per year when accounting for reduced costs in commuting, professional wardrobe, meals out, and incidental expenses like coffee runs and parking fees.\n\nThink about it: no gas or public transit fares, fewer dry cleaning bills, less temptation to grab expensive lunches, and reduced need for a full [professional wardrobe](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Ffrench-girl-winter-outfits). Those daily small expenses that barely register individually can add up to serious savings over time.\n\n### 4\\. A Workspace Tailored to You\n\nIn a traditional office, you work with whatever setup you're given—the desk, the chair, the lighting, the temperature that someone else controls. At home, you can create an [environment optimized](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fremote-work-essentials) for how you work best.\n\nMaybe that means an ergonomic chair that actually fits your body, a standing desk, natural light from a window, plants on your desk, or a space quiet enough for deep concentration. You can adjust the temperature, play background music if it helps you focus, or work in complete silence. Your workspace, your rules.\n\n### 5\\. Fewer Interruptions and Distractions\n\nOpen-plan offices were supposed to foster collaboration, but they often create constant interruption instead. Colleagues stopping by your desk, impromptu conversations you can't escape, the ambient noise of dozens of people working in one space—it all fragments your attention.\n\nAt home, you can control your environment to minimize distractions. Close the door, silence notifications during [focus time](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwhite-noise-for-calm-and-focus), and create the conditions for deep work. [Research from Stanford](https:\u002F\u002Fsiepr.stanford.edu\u002Fpublications\u002Fessay\u002Fbright-future-working-home) found that remote workers were 13% more productive than their in-office counterparts, partly due to a quieter work environment.\n\n### 6\\. Better Work-Life Integration\n\nNotice I said integration, not balance. The idea of perfectly balanced scales—work on one side, life on the other—isn't realistic for most people. What remote work offers instead is the ability to weave work and life together more seamlessly.\n\nYou can throw in a load of laundry between meetings, be present when a package arrives, or eat lunch with your partner who also works from home. These small moments of integration can reduce the feeling that work and life are constantly competing for your attention.\n\n### 7\\. Healthier Eating Habits\n\nWhen you work from home, you have full access to your own kitchen. That means you can prepare [healthy meals](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fbusy-mornings-20-healthy-breakfast-ideas-if-you-don-t-have-time) and snacks instead of relying on whatever's available near your office—which is often fast food, vending machines, or expensive takeout.\n\nYou can [meal prep](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F5-tips-for-meal-prep) on Sunday and actually eat what you prepared. You can make a real lunch instead of grabbing something quick because you only have 30 minutes. For people with dietary restrictions or health goals, this control over food is invaluable.\n\n### 8\\. More Time for Movement and Exercise\n\n![benefits of working from home](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fbenefits_of_working_from_home_9517cb9baa.webp)\n\nThe time you save on commuting can become time for physical activity. Many remote workers find they can finally fit in that morning workout, [take a walk during lunch](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F9-ways-to-walk-a-bit-more-every-day), or do a quick [yoga session](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F5-yoga-poses-for-immediate-stress-relief) between meetings.\n\nPlus, without the social pressure of office norms, you're free to move throughout the day—stretch at your desk, take standing breaks, or work from different positions. Your body isn't meant to sit in the same chair for eight hours straight, and remote work gives you permission to honor that.\n\n### 9\\. Reduced Stress and Better Mental Health\n\nFor many people, the daily commute is one of the most stressful parts of working. Sitting in traffic, dealing with crowded public transit, rushing to make it on time—it all takes a toll. Eliminating that stress can significantly improve your overall well-being.\n\nRemote work also allows you to manage your environment in ways that support your mental health. You can take breaks when you need them, step outside for fresh air, or create a calming workspace. For people who find open offices overstimulating or anxiety-inducing, working from home can be genuinely transformative.\n\n### 10\\. Location Independence\n\nRemote work means you're no longer tethered to a specific city because of your job. You can live somewhere more affordable, closer to family, or simply somewhere you've always wanted to be. Some remote workers take this further, [traveling while they work](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-rise-of-digital-nomads-exploring-the-trend) or relocating internationally.\n\nEven if you're not planning a major move, the flexibility to work from different locations—a coffee shop, a library, a friend's house—can break up the monotony and provide fresh energy.\n\n### 11\\. Environmental Benefits\n\nWhen millions of people stop commuting, the environmental impact is significant. Remote work reduces carbon emissions from transportation, decreases energy consumption in large office buildings, and cuts down on the waste generated by traditional workplaces.\n\nResearch from [Global Workplace Analytics](https:\u002F\u002Fglobalworkplaceanalytics.com\u002Fcut-oil) suggests that if everyone who could work remotely did so just half the time, it could reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 54 million tons annually. Your decision to work from home isn't just good for you—it's good for the planet.\n\n### 12\\. Increased Autonomy and Trust\n\nWorking from home requires—and often builds—a foundation of trust between employees and employers. When you're not being physically monitored, you're trusted to manage your own time and deliver results. For many professionals, this autonomy is deeply motivating.\n\nThe shift from measuring \"time in seat\" to measuring actual output can be liberating. You're judged on what you accomplish, not on whether you look busy. This results-oriented approach often brings out people's best work.\n\n## The Honest Challenges of Remote Work\n\nWorking from home isn't perfect, and pretending otherwise doesn't help anyone. Here are the real challenges—and how to address them.\n\n### Isolation and Loneliness\n\nWithout the natural social interactions of an office, remote work can feel isolating. You miss the casual conversations, the lunch outings, the sense of being part of a team physically working together.\n\nHow to address it: [Be intentional](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fintenional-living) about connection. Schedule virtual coffee chats with colleagues. Work from a coffee shop or coworking space occasionally. Make plans with friends outside of work hours. Join online communities related to your profession or interests.\n\n### Difficulty Unplugging\n\nWhen your home is your office, the boundary between work and personal life can blur. It's tempting to check email at 10 PM \"since you're right there\" or to work longer hours because there's no commute signaling the end of the day.\n\nHow to address it: Create clear boundaries. Set specific work hours and stick to them. Have a dedicated workspace you can physically leave at the end of the day. Close your laptop and put it away. Create [end-of-day rituals](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Ffall-wellness-rituals) that signal the transition from work to personal time.\n\n### Communication Challenges\n\nWithout in-person interaction, miscommunication is more common. Tone gets lost in text. Quick questions that would take 30 seconds in person become longer email chains. Collaboration can feel more effortful.\n\nHow to address it: Over-communicate, especially about tone and intent. Use [video calls](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fzoom-calls-make-up) when nuance matters. Be explicit about expectations and deadlines. Check in with teammates regularly, not just about work tasks.\n\n### Distractions at Home\n\nWhile you escape office interruptions, home has its own distractions—household chores calling your name, family members needing attention, the refrigerator beckoning, the temptation to \"just quickly\" do something that isn't work.\n\nHow to address it: Create a dedicated workspace, even if it's just a corner of a room. Communicate boundaries with household members during work hours. Use time-blocking techniques to maintain focus. Treat your work hours as non-negotiable, just as you would if you were at an office.\n\n## Making Remote Work Actually Work\n\nSuccess with remote work isn't automatic—it requires intention and structure. Here are the habits that make the biggest difference:\n\n![benefits of working from home](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fbenefits_of_working_from_home_83b02444cd.webp)\n\n\\-Establish a [morning routine](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Finfluencer-morning-routine). Even though you don't have to commute, having a consistent morning routine helps you transition into work mode. Get dressed (yes, real clothes help), have your coffee ritual, and signal to your brain that it's time to focus.\n\n\\-Create a dedicated workspace. Having a specific place for work—even if it's just a particular chair at your dining table—creates a mental boundary between work and home life.\n\n\\-Take real breaks. Step away from your desk. Go outside. Move your body. Breaks actually improve [productivity](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fstrategic-productivity-how-to-work-smart-not-hard), not diminish it.\n\n\\-Set boundaries and communicate them. Let your household know your work hours. Let your colleagues know when you're available. Protect your time on both ends.\n\n\\-End your workday intentionally. Create a shutdown ritual—review tomorrow's tasks, close your laptop, leave your workspace. This mental closure helps you actually rest.\n\n## Is Working From Home Right for You?\n\nWorking from home isn't universally better or worse than working in an office—it depends on your role, your personality, your living situation, and your preferences. Some people thrive with the autonomy and flexibility; others genuinely miss the structure and social connection of a traditional workplace.\n\nThe good news is that remote work is no longer an all-or-nothing proposition. Many companies now offer hybrid arrangements that let you capture the benefits of both worlds. The key is understanding what you need to do your best work—and advocating for the arrangement that supports it.\n\nWhatever your situation, remote work skills—self-management, clear communication, intentional boundary-setting—are valuable regardless of where you physically work. These are the skills of the modern professional, and developing them will serve you well throughout your career.\n\n## FAQs About Working From Home\n\n### How do I stay productive working from home?\n\nCreate a dedicated workspace, establish a consistent routine, minimize distractions during focus time, take regular breaks, and set clear boundaries between work and personal time. Structure is your friend.\n\n### How much money can I save working from home?\n\nEstimates vary, but studies suggest remote workers save between $4,000-$6,000 annually on commuting, meals, professional clothing, and related expenses. Your actual savings depend on your previous commute and spending habits.\n\n### How do I combat loneliness when working from home?\n\nBe proactive about connection. Schedule regular video calls with colleagues, work from public spaces occasionally, maintain relationships outside of work, and consider joining professional communities or coworking spaces.\n\n### Is working from home bad for my career?\n\nNot inherently. However, remote workers need to be more intentional about visibility, communication, and relationship-building. Make your work visible, stay connected with colleagues and leadership, and don't let \"out of sight\" become \"out of mind.\"\n\n### How do I set boundaries when working from home?\n\nCommunicate your work hours clearly to both colleagues and household members. Have a dedicated workspace you can leave at the end of the day. Create rituals that signal the start and end of work. Learn to close your laptop and actually stop working.\n\n### What equipment do I need to work from home effectively?\n\nAt minimum: reliable internet, a computer, and a comfortable workspace. Beyond that, consider an ergonomic chair, external monitor, good lighting for video calls, and noise-canceling headphones. Invest in what supports your specific work needs. Check our guide “[Remote Work Essentials](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fremote-work-essentials)” to get inspiration.","work-from-home","benefits of working from home, remote work advantages, work from home benefits, working remotely pros and cons, WFH tips, remote work productivity","Discover the real benefits of working from home—from flexibility and savings to better health. Plus, practical tips to overcome common remote work challenges.",{"id":207,"name":208,"alternativeText":209,"caption":209,"width":52,"height":53,"formats":210,"hash":231,"ext":56,"mime":59,"size":232,"url":233,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":234,"updatedAt":235},18,"working-from-home.jpg","working-from-home",{"large":211,"small":216,"medium":221,"thumbnail":226},{"ext":56,"url":212,"hash":213,"mime":59,"name":214,"path":61,"size":215,"width":63,"height":64},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_working_from_home_490f01a0ef.jpg","large_working_from_home_490f01a0ef","large_working-from-home.jpg",144.93,{"ext":56,"url":217,"hash":218,"mime":59,"name":219,"path":61,"size":220,"width":70,"height":71},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_working_from_home_490f01a0ef.jpg","small_working_from_home_490f01a0ef","small_working-from-home.jpg",37.24,{"ext":56,"url":222,"hash":223,"mime":59,"name":224,"path":61,"size":225,"width":77,"height":78},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_working_from_home_490f01a0ef.jpg","medium_working_from_home_490f01a0ef","medium_working-from-home.jpg",79.53,{"ext":56,"url":227,"hash":228,"mime":59,"name":229,"path":61,"size":230,"width":84,"height":85},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_working_from_home_490f01a0ef.jpg","thumbnail_working_from_home_490f01a0ef","thumbnail_working-from-home.jpg",9.67,"working_from_home_490f01a0ef",350.79,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fworking_from_home_490f01a0ef.jpg","2020-12-26T17:11:29.245Z","2025-02-22T08:36:36.239Z",{"id":6,"name":7,"slug":8,"createdAt":93,"updatedAt":94,"publishedAt":95},{"id":26,"name":97,"slug":98,"instagram":99,"facebook":100,"bio":101,"createdAt":102,"updatedAt":103,"publishedAt":104,"linkedIn":105,"avatar":238},{"id":26,"name":107,"alternativeText":108,"caption":108,"width":109,"height":109,"formats":239,"hash":119,"ext":112,"mime":115,"size":120,"url":121,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":122,"updatedAt":123},{"thumbnail":240},{"ext":112,"url":113,"hash":114,"mime":115,"name":116,"path":61,"size":117,"width":118,"height":118},"https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fworking_from_home_490f01a0ef.jpg",{"id":243,"title":244,"createdAt":245,"updatedAt":246,"publishedAt":247,"content":248,"slug":249,"coffees":22,"seo_title":244,"keywords":250,"seo_desc":251,"featuredImage":252,"category":282,"author":285,"img":289},8,"How to Practice Self-Discipline: 10 Strategies That Actually Work","2020-12-26T16:43:02.491Z","2025-12-11T23:04:35.268Z","2020-12-26T16:43:13.423Z","You set the [alarm for 6 AM](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fproductivity-diaries-i-started-to-wake-up-at-6-am-and-good-things-have-happened) with the best intentions. You're going to wake up early, exercise, get ahead on work, and finally become the disciplined person you've always wanted to be. And then the alarm goes off, and within seconds you've hit snooze, pulled the covers back up, and promised yourself you'll start tomorrow.\n\nIf this cycle feels familiar, you're not alone—and you're not lacking some fundamental character trait that others possess. Self-discipline isn't a personality type or a gift bestowed on the fortunate few. It's a skill, and like any skill, it can be developed with the right approach and consistent practice.\n\n[Research from the American Psychological Association](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.apa.org\u002Fmonitor\u002F2012\u002F01\u002Fself-control) consistently shows that self-control is one of the strongest predictors of success—in career, relationships, health, and overall life satisfaction. Yet most of us struggle with it, not because we're weak, but because we've been approaching it wrong.\n\nThis guide will show you how to practice self-discipline in a way that actually works—not through white-knuckle willpower, but through understanding how your brain functions and working with it, not against it.\n\n## What Self-Discipline Actually Is (And Isn't)\n\nSelf-discipline is the ability to control your impulses, emotions, and behaviors in order to achieve your goals. It's choosing what you want *most* over what you want *now*.\n\nBut here's where most people get it wrong: they think self-discipline means constantly battling your desires through sheer force of will. That's exhausting and unsustainable. True self-discipline isn't about fighting yourself—it's about creating systems, [habits](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwant-to-be-smarter-these-are-the-9-habits-that-will-boost-your-intelligence), and environments that make the right choices easier.\n\nThe famous [Stanford marshmallow experiment](https:\u002F\u002Fen.wikipedia.org\u002Fwiki\u002FStanford_marshmallow_experiment#:~:text=The%20Stanford%20marshmallow%20experiment%20was,depending%20on%20the%20child's%20preference.) demonstrated that children who could delay gratification (waiting for two marshmallows instead of eating one immediately) went on to have better academic performance, healthier relationships, and greater career success. But follow-up research revealed something crucial: the children who succeeded weren't necessarily better at resisting temptation. Many of them simply looked away from the marshmallow, sang songs to themselves, or found other ways to make waiting easier.\n\nThe lesson? Self-discipline isn't about having an iron will. It's about [being strategic](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fstrategic-productivity-how-to-work-smart-not-hard).\n\n## Why Willpower Alone Isn't Enough\n\nIf you've ever felt like your willpower simply \"runs out\" by the end of the day, you're onto something. Research by psychologist Roy Baumeister introduced the concept of \"ego depletion\"—the idea that self-control draws from a limited pool of mental resources that gets depleted with use.\n\nEvery decision you make, every temptation you resist, every distraction you ignore chips away at your willpower reserves. This explains why you might eat well all day and then demolish a bag of chips at 9 PM, or why you're more likely to skip the gym after a mentally draining workday.\n\n![selfdiscipline-best-practices.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fselfdiscipline_best_practices_44d5e0b6be.jpg)\n\nHowever, more recent research suggests that our beliefs about willpower matter too. [Studies by psychologist Carol Dweck](https:\u002F\u002Fpmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov\u002Farticles\u002FPMC10310002\u002F) found that people who believe willpower is unlimited don't show the same depletion effects. What you believe about your own self-control actually shapes your capacity for it.\n\nThe practical takeaway? Don't rely solely on willpower. Build systems that reduce the number of decisions you need to make and create environments that support your goals.\n\n## 10 Strategies to Build Lasting Self-Discipline\n\n### 1\\. Start Ridiculously Small\n\nThe biggest mistake people make when trying to build self-discipline is starting too big. They go from zero exercise to committing to an hour at the gym every day, or from eating whatever they want to a strict diet overnight. This approach almost always fails.\n\nInstead, start so small it feels almost silly. Want to meditate? Start with one minute. Want to exercise? Start with five push-ups. [Want to read more](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F5-books-that-every-working-gal-should-read)? Start with one page. The goal isn't the activity itself—it's building the habit of showing up. Once that becomes automatic, you can gradually increase.\n\nResearch on habit formation shows that consistency matters more than intensity. Five minutes every day beats an hour once a week.\n\n### 2\\. Design Your Environment for Success\n\nYour environment shapes your behavior far more than you realize. If you're trying to [eat healthier](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fmediterranean-diet-recipes-nutritionist-approved) but your kitchen is full of junk food, you're fighting an uphill battle. If you want to check your phone less but it's always within arm's reach, you're setting yourself up to fail.\n\nMake the behaviors you want easier and the behaviors you're avoiding harder. Want to go to the gym in the morning? Sleep in your workout clothes with your bag packed by the door. Want to [scroll social media](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fpsychology-social-media-women) less? Delete the apps from your phone and only access them through a browser. Want to read more? [Keep a book](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fbooks-for-fall) on your nightstand and your phone in another room.\n\nThe people who appear to have incredible willpower often just have well-designed environments.\n\n### 3\\. Create a Non-Negotiable Morning Routine\n\nHow you start your day sets the tone for everything that follows. A structured [morning routine](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Finfluencer-morning-routine) builds momentum and gives you early wins that carry forward.\n\nYour routine doesn't need to be complicated. It might be as simple as: wake up at the same time, make your bed, drink a [glass of water](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwater-is-a-beauty-elixir), and spend 10 minutes on something meaningful before checking email or social media. The key is consistency—doing the same things in the same order removes [decision fatigue](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fdecision-fatigue) and creates automatic behavior.\n\nWhen your morning is structured, you're not starting each day by depleting willpower on small decisions. You're preserving it for what matters.\n\n### 4\\. Use Implementation Intentions\n\nVague goals lead to vague results. \"I'll exercise more\" is a wish. \"I will go for a 20-minute walk every day at 7 AM before I shower\" is a plan.\n\nResearch by psychologist Peter Gollwitzer shows that implementation intentions—specific \"if-then\" plans—dramatically increase follow-through. The format is simple: \"When \\[situation\\], I will \\[behavior\\].\" For example: \"When I finish lunch, I will take a 10-minute walk.\" Or: \"When I feel the urge to [check social media](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fi-stop-scrolling-in-the-morning), I will take three deep breaths first.\"\n\nThis technique works because it pre-decides your response to specific situations, reducing the mental load when the moment arrives.\n\n### 5\\. Practice Delayed Gratification\n\nSelf-discipline is essentially the ability to delay gratification—to choose future benefits over immediate pleasure. Like a muscle, this capacity strengthens with practice.\n\n![how to practice self-discipline](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fhow_to_practice_self_discipline_533b57c129.webp)\n\nStart small. When you want that second coffee, wait 15 minutes. When you're tempted to check your phone, set a timer for 10 minutes first. When you want to [buy something impulsively](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-identify-your-bad-spending-habits), wait 24 hours. These small delays build your tolerance for discomfort and strengthen your ability to sit with wanting something without immediately acting on it.\n\nOver time, you'll find it easier to make choices that serve your long-term goals rather than your immediate impulses.\n\n### 6\\. Remove Temptations Before They Arise\n\nThe easiest way to resist temptation is to avoid encountering it in the first place. This isn't weakness—it's strategy.\n\nDon't keep [snacks](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthese-are-the-snacks-that-won-t-ruin-your-diet) in the house that you're trying to avoid. Unsubscribe from retail emails that tempt you to spend. Use website blockers during focused work time. Don't follow [social media accounts that make you feel bad](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fenough-with-those-influencers) or trigger unhelpful comparisons.\n\nEvery temptation you remove is a decision you don't have to make and willpower you don't have to spend.\n\n### 7\\. Build Accountability Systems\n\nWe're social creatures, and knowing that someone else is watching—or expecting something from us—significantly increases follow-through.\n\nFind an accountability partner who shares similar goals. Join a class or group where your absence would be noticed. Tell someone about your commitment. Use apps that track your habits and share your progress. The social element adds an external layer of motivation that supports your internal discipline.\n\nEven just the act of writing down your goals and tracking your progress creates a form of accountability to yourself.\n\n### 8\\. Manage Your Energy, Not Just Your Time\n\n[Self-discipline](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fself-discipline-7-proven-ways) requires energy. If you're sleep-deprived, stressed, hungry, or burnt out, your capacity for self-control plummets. This isn't a moral failing—it's biology.\n\nPrioritize the basics: consistent sleep, regular meals, physical movement, and breaks throughout the day. Schedule your most challenging tasks for when your energy is highest (for most people, this is morning). Recognize that willpower naturally dips in the afternoon and plan accordingly.\n\nTaking care of your physical needs isn't a luxury or a distraction from discipline—it's the foundation that makes discipline possible.\n\n### 9\\. Reframe Discomfort as Growth\n\nMuch of what we procrastinate on or avoid involves some form of discomfort—boredom, difficulty, uncertainty, or [fear of failure](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-art-of-failure-how-to-turn-mistakes-into-actual-success). Building self-discipline means developing a new relationship with discomfort.\n\nInstead of viewing discomfort as something to escape, start seeing it as evidence of growth. The burn you feel in a workout means your muscles are getting stronger. The difficulty of a challenging project means you're developing new skills. The discomfort of having a hard conversation means you're building a deeper relationship.\n\nWhen you expect discomfort and welcome it as part of the process, it loses much of its power to derail you.\n\n### 10\\. Forgive Yourself and Start Again\n\nYou will slip up. You will miss days. You will fall back into old patterns. This is not a sign that you lack discipline or that you should give up—it's a normal part of building any new skill.\n\nResearch shows that self-compassion actually supports self-discipline better than self-[criticism](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fcriticism-at-the-workplace-can-you-handle-it). When you beat yourself up after a lapse, you create negative emotions that often lead to more avoidance and more lapses. When you acknowledge the slip, treat yourself with kindness, and simply begin again, you maintain momentum.\n\nThe most disciplined people aren't those who never fail. They're the ones who get back up quickly and without drama.\n\n## Making Self-Discipline Stick\n\nBuilding self-discipline isn't about a dramatic overnight transformation. It's about small, consistent choices that compound over time.\n\nStart with one area of your life where you want more discipline. Choose one or two strategies from this list and commit to practicing them for the next 30 days. Once those become more automatic, add another strategy or expand to another area.\n\nRemember that every act of self-discipline, no matter how small, builds your capacity for more. The discipline you develop in one area of life tends to spill over into others. When you build the habit of making your bed, it becomes easier to keep your workspace organized. When you consistently show up for your morning [workout](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthese-are-the-9-workout-mistakes-i-made-and-i-didn-t-get-results), following through on work commitments becomes more natural.\n\nSelf-discipline isn't about perfection or punishment. It's about building a life that aligns with what you truly want—and having the skills to show up for that life, day after day.\n\n## FAQs About Self-Discipline\n\n### How long does it take to build self-discipline?\n\n![how to practice self-discipline](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fhow_to_practice_self_discipline_b503a04880.webp)\n\nResearch suggests habits take anywhere from 18 to 254 days to form, with an average of about 66 days. However, self-discipline is less about a finish line and more about ongoing practice. You'll likely notice improvements within a few weeks of consistent effort.\n\n### Why do I have discipline in some areas but not others?\n\nSelf-discipline is context-dependent. You might have established strong habits and systems in your career, but not in your health routine. The strategies that work in one area can often be adapted to others—it's about applying the same principles to new domains.\n\n### Is self-discipline the same as willpower?\n\nThey're related but different. Willpower is the mental energy you use to resist impulses in the moment. Self-discipline is a broader skill that includes creating systems, habits, and environments that reduce your reliance on willpower alone.\n\n### Can self-discipline be too extreme?\n\nYes. Excessive rigidity can lead to burnout, anxiety, and an inability to adapt. Healthy self-discipline includes knowing when to push through and when to rest, when to stick to the plan, and when to be flexible. Balance is key.\n\n### What if I keep failing at self-discipline?\n\nRepeated failure usually means your approach needs adjustment, not that you're incapable. Try smaller goals, different strategies, or examine whether the goal itself is truly aligned with your values. Sometimes we struggle with discipline because we're trying to force ourselves toward something we don't actually want.\n\n### Does exercise improve self-discipline?\n\nResearch suggests yes. Regular [physical exercise](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fpilates-flexibility) has been shown to improve self-regulation in other areas of life. The discipline required to maintain a workout routine appears to strengthen overall self-control capacity.\n\n### How do I stay disciplined when I don't feel motivated?\n\nThis is where systems matter most. Motivation fluctuates, but well-designed habits and environments carry you through low-motivation periods. Focus on showing up—even in a minimal way—rather than waiting until you feel like it. Action often precedes motivation, not the other way around.\n\n ","how-to-practice-self-discipline","how to practice self-discipline, self-discipline tips, build self-discipline, improve self-control, self-discipline strategies, develop willpower","Learn how to practice self-discipline with science-backed strategies. Discover why willpower fails, how habits form, and practical techniques to build lasting self-control.\n",{"id":253,"name":254,"alternativeText":255,"caption":255,"width":52,"height":53,"formats":256,"hash":277,"ext":56,"mime":59,"size":278,"url":279,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":280,"updatedAt":281},16,"how-to-practice-self discipline.jpg","how-to-practice-self discipline",{"large":257,"small":262,"medium":267,"thumbnail":272},{"ext":56,"url":258,"hash":259,"mime":59,"name":260,"path":61,"size":261,"width":63,"height":64},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31.jpg","large_how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31","large_how-to-practice-selfdiscipline.jpg",72.37,{"ext":56,"url":263,"hash":264,"mime":59,"name":265,"path":61,"size":266,"width":70,"height":71},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31.jpg","small_how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31","small_how-to-practice-selfdiscipline.jpg",25.76,{"ext":56,"url":268,"hash":269,"mime":59,"name":270,"path":61,"size":271,"width":77,"height":78},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31.jpg","medium_how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31","medium_how-to-practice-selfdiscipline.jpg",46.43,{"ext":56,"url":273,"hash":274,"mime":59,"name":275,"path":61,"size":276,"width":84,"height":85},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31.jpg","thumbnail_how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31","thumbnail_how-to-practice-selfdiscipline.jpg",8.5,"how_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31",136.71,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fhow_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31.jpg","2020-12-26T16:40:58.212Z","2025-02-22T08:36:22.517Z",{"id":26,"name":27,"slug":28,"createdAt":283,"updatedAt":284,"publishedAt":95},"2020-12-24T19:15:46.057Z","2025-10-01T19:50:39.801Z",{"id":14,"name":174,"slug":175,"instagram":176,"facebook":177,"bio":178,"createdAt":179,"updatedAt":180,"publishedAt":181,"linkedIn":182,"avatar":286},{"id":14,"name":107,"alternativeText":108,"caption":108,"width":109,"height":109,"formats":287,"hash":190,"ext":112,"mime":115,"size":191,"url":192,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":193,"updatedAt":194},{"thumbnail":288},{"ext":112,"url":186,"hash":187,"mime":115,"name":188,"path":61,"size":189,"width":118,"height":118},"https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fhow_to_practice_selfdiscipline_6429e0bf31.jpg",{"id":36,"title":291,"createdAt":292,"updatedAt":293,"publishedAt":294,"content":295,"slug":296,"coffees":14,"seo_title":291,"keywords":297,"seo_desc":298,"featuredImage":299,"category":329,"author":330,"img":334},"She Took Over Her Family Business at 18: A Young Woman Entrepreneur on Proving Herself in a Male-Dominated Industry","2020-12-26T16:15:18.629Z","2025-12-11T22:32:53.874Z","2020-12-26T16:15:34.085Z","What does it take for a young woman to earn respect in a room full of people who've been in the industry longer than she's been alive? For A., the answer has been six years of persistence, [continuous learning](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwhy-invest-in-lifelong-learning), and refusing to let anyone dismiss her as \"daddy's little girl.\"\n\nA. stepped into her family's business at just 18 years old, balancing university studies with the steep learning curve of running a company. Today, at 24, she administrates most of the business—though she'll be the first to tell you the journey hasn't been smooth. In a [male-dominated industry](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwomen-in-male-dominated-industries) where age and gender work against her daily, she's had to work twice as hard to be taken seriously.\n\nIn this candid interview, A. shares the real [challenges](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwhat-are-the-biggest-challenges-freelancers-face) of young female entrepreneurship—from employees who wouldn't listen to the \"kid\" running the place, to contractors who refused to address her directly. Her story is a reminder that while the path for women in business is still uneven, it's being carved wider by those willing to walk it anyway.\n\n## Starting Young: The Decision to Join the Family Business\n\n### How did you end up in entrepreneurship at such a young age?\n\nI got into business because of my father—it's a family company that he started. I'd always found it appealing, so when the opportunity came, I decided to take it. I was 18 at the time, which meant I was juggling university classes while trying to learn every aspect of the business. It was challenging to [combine studies with working](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-combine-work-and-studies) so many hours, but I knew this was what I wanted.\n\n### What were the first major challenges you faced?\n\nMy age was the biggest hurdle at first. When you're the youngest person in the room—and some of your employees have been there since before you were born—it takes time for people to see you as a legitimate authority figure. It took quite a while before people began to take me seriously.\n\nThe other challenge was product knowledge. When you're stepping into a business, you need to know exactly what you're selling—inside and out. You can't say \"I don't know\" because you need to know better than anyone. Training from scratch was crucial, but that part you can overcome relatively quickly with dedication.\n\n## The Double Challenge: Being Young and Being a Woman\n\n### How hard is it for a young woman to take over a business, especially in a male-dominated industry?\n\nAfter six years, I can honestly say I now administer most of the company. But even with all that training and experience, I'm still underestimated. As a woman in this industry, there's no room for mistakes. You can't just \"think\" you know something—you have to *know* it, with 100% certainty. When you're working with employees who have decades more experience than you, and many of them are men who tend to underestimate you, you have to be absolutely sure of what you're doing.\n\nIt's still a challenge. I'm still learning how to navigate it.\n\n### How did older employees and collaborators treat you initially?\n\nAll our employees and collaborators are older than me, so at first, I was just \"the kid\" who was here to run this place. They didn't listen to me. They didn't consider my input. The most difficult part is our department with more men—given the nature of the company—because they're not quick to listen to someone younger, especially a woman.\n\nI've had to accept that earning their respect isn't something I can impose. Someone older has to believe in you, accept you—and that takes time. But what really stung was our external contractors. Even after I'd been in the business for four or five years, they still wouldn't address me directly. They saw me as \"daddy's little girl\" and didn't acknowledge me as a professional, even on issues I fully managed.\n\n## Looking Forward: Expansion and Proving Them Wrong\n\n### What's your biggest challenge now?\n\nThe [bigger challenge](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Freal-stories-my-biggest-challenge-at-work) now is expansion. There are hardly any women in our industry, which makes it tricky because men often assume they call the shots and are better negotiators. So it's a constant challenge to prove them wrong—which I'm already doing by standing on my own feet.\n\nI've had to train specifically in [negotiation skills](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.youtube.com\u002Fwatch?v=33RHmOzcNPo&t=2s) so I can hold my own in meetings. When you walk in as a young woman, you're already at a disadvantage. The playing field isn't level from the start, so you have to be that much more prepared.\n\n## On Women in Entrepreneurship: Breaking Stereotypes\n\n![interview-young-entrepreneur.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Finterview_young_entrepreneur_05aa22cf9f.jpg)\n\n### Do you think things need to change for women entrepreneurs? Do women have to work harder than men?\n\nI firmly believe women are equally capable. But there are more difficulties for us because, right now, a woman can't easily lead a business without facing skepticism. There's a lack of faith—both from others and, honestly, from women themselves. Not many dare to try.\n\nPart of this is [stereotypes that affect women](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fstereotype-women-in-reality-tv), too. Many women prefer to aim for a high-level position in someone else's company rather than running their own business. There are only a few women entrepreneurs who are willing to deal with all these circumstances. That lack of faith leads them to stand behind men instead of beside them—or in front. They sabotage themselves.\n\n### What skills should a young woman have to succeed as an entrepreneur?\n\nThe same skills as a man—there shouldn't be a difference. We live in a very dynamic era, and every entrepreneur needs to be well-educated and committed to continuous learning. That's non-negotiable.\n\nBut women especially need to believe in themselves and actively work to overcome stereotypes. We're capable—and we prove it by being excellent leaders. You need faith in yourself, courage to take risks, [confidence](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fconfidence-gap-women-underestimate-their-abilities), and a willingness to keep working on yourself. I believe women are brilliant, but unfortunately, there's still a massive stereotype around women in entrepreneurship.\n\nMy advice? Dare to try. You can do it—as long as you believe you can.\n\n## Key Takeaways from A.'s Journey\n\nProduct knowledge is power. When you can't afford to be underestimated, knowing your business inside and out becomes your armor. \"You can't say 'I don't know' because you need to know better than anyone.\"\n\nRespect is earned over time, not demanded. A. learned that gaining credibility with older colleagues isn't something you can force—it requires consistent performance and patience.\n\nSkill gaps can be filled strategically. Recognizing that negotiations were a weak point, A. invested in [training](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-most-effective-leadership-books-you-will-ever-read) specifically for that skill. Knowing where you need to grow is half the battle.\n\nSelf-sabotage is real—and avoidable. The biggest barrier for women in entrepreneurship isn't always external. Sometimes we hold ourselves back by not believing we belong at the table.\n\nShowing up is proving them wrong. Every day A. runs her business, she's challenging the assumption that young women can't lead in her industry. Sometimes the most powerful statement is simply continuing to do the work.\n\n*A.'s story is still being written.* At 24, she's already navigated challenges that would discourage many people twice her age. Her journey reminds us that the path for women in business—especially young women, especially in male-dominated fields—isn't always fair. But it's walkable. And every woman who walks it makes it a little wider for those who come after.\n\n\n\n\n \n\n","interview-an-inspirational-young-entrepreneur","young woman entrepreneur, women in business, female entrepreneurship, family business, women in male-dominated industries, young business owner","At 18, she stepped into her family business. Six years later, she runs most of the company. In this candid interview, a young woman entrepreneur shares her journey of earning respect in a male-dominated industry.",{"id":300,"name":301,"alternativeText":302,"caption":302,"width":52,"height":53,"formats":303,"hash":324,"ext":56,"mime":59,"size":325,"url":326,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":327,"updatedAt":328},15,"interview-young-entrepreneur.jpg","",{"large":304,"small":309,"medium":314,"thumbnail":319},{"ext":56,"url":305,"hash":306,"mime":59,"name":307,"path":61,"size":308,"width":63,"height":64},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f.jpg","large_interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f","large_interview-young-entrepreneur.jpg",50.36,{"ext":56,"url":310,"hash":311,"mime":59,"name":312,"path":61,"size":313,"width":70,"height":71},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f.jpg","small_interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f","small_interview-young-entrepreneur.jpg",20.06,{"ext":56,"url":315,"hash":316,"mime":59,"name":317,"path":61,"size":318,"width":77,"height":78},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f.jpg","medium_interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f","medium_interview-young-entrepreneur.jpg",34.19,{"ext":56,"url":320,"hash":321,"mime":59,"name":322,"path":61,"size":323,"width":84,"height":85},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f.jpg","thumbnail_interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f","thumbnail_interview-young-entrepreneur.jpg",7.52,"interview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f",95.01,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Finterview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f.jpg","2020-12-26T16:15:06.358Z","2020-12-26T16:15:06.368Z",{"id":22,"name":23,"slug":24,"createdAt":171,"updatedAt":172,"publishedAt":95},{"id":14,"name":174,"slug":175,"instagram":176,"facebook":177,"bio":178,"createdAt":179,"updatedAt":180,"publishedAt":181,"linkedIn":182,"avatar":331},{"id":14,"name":107,"alternativeText":108,"caption":108,"width":109,"height":109,"formats":332,"hash":190,"ext":112,"mime":115,"size":191,"url":192,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":193,"updatedAt":194},{"thumbnail":333},{"ext":112,"url":186,"hash":187,"mime":115,"name":188,"path":61,"size":189,"width":118,"height":118},"https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Finterview_young_entrepreneur_1502095a0f.jpg",{"id":336,"title":337,"createdAt":338,"updatedAt":339,"publishedAt":340,"content":341,"slug":342,"coffees":26,"seo_title":337,"keywords":343,"seo_desc":344,"featuredImage":345,"category":374,"author":375,"img":379},6,"How to Handle Criticism at Work: A Guide to Receiving Feedback Gracefully","2020-12-26T15:40:56.254Z","2026-04-15T16:18:34.822Z","2020-12-26T15:44:20.773Z","Your manager just pulled you aside after the meeting. \"Can we talk about your presentation?\" Your stomach drops, and before they've even finished their sentence, your mind is already racing with defenses, explanations, and that familiar sting of feeling judged.\n\n[Research from leadership consulting firm Zenger Folkman](https:\u002F\u002Fzengerfolkman.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwhy-is-it-so-difficult-for-leaders-to-give-positive-feedback\u002F) found that while 92% of respondents agreed that negative feedback, if delivered appropriately, is effective at improving performance, most of us still dread receiving it. The discomfort is real—and it's deeply human.\n\nBut learning how to handle criticism at work isn't just about surviving uncomfortable conversations. It's about transforming feedback—even the kind that stings—into fuel for professional growth. The ability to receive criticism gracefully is one of the most valuable skills you can develop, and it's one that distinguishes good professionals from truly exceptional ones.\n\nWhether you're dealing with a tough [performance review](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fyear-end-review-documentation), a colleague's blunt observations, or a client's sharp feedback, this guide will help you respond with professionalism, protect your confidence, and actually use criticism to get better at what you do.\n\n## Why Criticism Feels So Personal (Even When It's Not)\n\nWhen someone critiques our work, our brain often interprets it as a threat—not to our job, but to our sense of self.\n\nNeuroscience research shows that social rejection activates the same brain regions as physical pain. When we hear \"your report needs significant revisions,\" our amygdala—the brain's alarm system—can fire as if we're in actual danger. This explains the fight-or-flight responses many of us experience: the urge to defend ourselves, the impulse to dismiss the feedback, or the desire to retreat entirely.\n\nUnderstanding this biological reality isn't about [making excuses](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-stop-making-excuses)—it's about giving yourself grace. Your reaction to criticism isn't a character flaw; it's your nervous system doing what it evolved to do. The goal isn't to eliminate the discomfort but to create space between the initial reaction and your response.\n\n## Constructive vs. Destructive Criticism: Know the Difference\n\nNot all criticism is created equal, and learning to distinguish between helpful feedback and unhelpful attacks is essential for knowing how to respond.\n\n### What Constructive Criticism Looks Like\n\nConstructive criticism is specific, actionable, and focused on behavior or work product rather than your character. It sounds like: \"The client presentation would be stronger with more data to support the recommendations. Here's what I'd suggest adding...\" It comes with context, concrete examples, and usually some guidance on how to improve.\n\nEven when constructive criticism is delivered imperfectly—perhaps too bluntly or at an inconvenient time—the intent behind it is to help you improve. The person giving it generally wants you to succeed.\n\n### What Destructive Criticism Looks Like\n\nDestructive criticism is vague, personal, and aimed at tearing down rather than building up. It sounds like: \"This is terrible\" or \"You always mess things up.\" It offers no path forward, no specific examples, and often attacks who you are rather than what you did.\n\nDestructive criticism can also be a tool of [workplace bullying](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-recover-from-a-toxic-workplace) when it's repetitive, targeted at the same person, and designed to harm rather than help. If you're experiencing this pattern, it's important to document incidents and [involve HR](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Finterview-green-flags)—this isn't feedback you need to gracefully accept.\n\n## How to Handle Criticism at Work: A Step-by-Step Framework\n\nWhen you receive criticism, having a reliable process to follow can help you respond thoughtfully rather than reactively. Here's a framework that works whether you're in a formal review or receiving impromptu feedback.\n\n### Step 1: Pause Before You React\n\nThe moment you hear criticism, your first task is to create a tiny gap between stimulus and response. Even one or two seconds can be enough to prevent a defensive reaction you'll regret.\n\nTake a breath. Feel your feet on the floor. Remind yourself that this moment will pass and that how you respond matters more than the initial sting. If you need more time, it's completely acceptable to say: \"Thank you for sharing that. Can I take a moment to process before I respond?\"\n\n### Step 2: Listen to Understand, Not to Defend\n\nYour instinct may be to start building your defense while the other person is still talking. Resist it. Instead, focus entirely on understanding what they're saying. What specific behavior or outcome are they addressing? What impact did it have?\n\nMaintain open [body language](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fbody-language-hacks-for-authority)—uncross your arms, make appropriate eye contact, and nod to show you're engaged. These physical cues not only signal receptiveness to the other person but can actually help regulate your own nervous system.\n\n### Step 3: Ask Clarifying Questions\n\n![critisism-friend-foe.jpg](https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fcritisism_friend_foe_15b4cd9b46.jpg)\n\nIf the criticism is vague, ask for specifics. This isn't defensive—it's professional. You might say: \"Can you give me an example of what you mean?\" or \"What would success look like in this area?\" or \"I want to make sure I understand—could you tell me more about what you observed?\"\n\n[Asking questions](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F5-useful-questions-to-ask-your-manager) serves multiple purposes: it helps you get actionable information, demonstrates that you take the feedback seriously, and gives you time to process while keeping the conversation productive.\n\n### Step 4: Acknowledge Without Over-Apologizing\n\nThank the person for their feedback—yes, even if it was uncomfortable to hear. This doesn't mean you're agreeing with everything they said; it means you're acknowledging their [effort to communicate](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F4-hacks-for-effective-communication-in-the-workplace) with you. A simple \"Thank you for bringing this to my attention\" or \"I appreciate you taking the time to share this\" goes a long way.\n\nAvoid the trap of excessive apologizing, which can undermine your credibility. There's a difference between \"I'm so sorry, I'm terrible at this, I can't believe I messed up again\" and \"I understand the impact this had. Here's what I'll do differently.\"\n\n### Step 5: Separate the Valid from the Noise\n\nNot every piece of criticism deserves equal weight. After the conversation, take time to evaluate: Is this feedback accurate? Does it align with what others have told me? Is the source credible and well-intentioned? What part of this can I actually use to improve?\n\nSometimes criticism reflects more about the giver than about you. Someone having a bad day, a colleague with different stylistic preferences, or a [manager with unrealistic expectations](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fmiranda-priestly-management-style) may deliver feedback that's more opinion than objective assessment. Extract what's useful and let go of the rest.\n\n### Step 6: Create an Action Plan\n\nFor valid criticism, the most powerful response is action. Identify one or two specific changes you can make based on the feedback. If appropriate, share your plan with the person who gave you the feedback: \"Based on what you shared, I'm going to focus on X and Y. I'd appreciate your input as I work on this.\"\n\nThis approach transforms criticism from something that happened to you into something you're actively using. It also demonstrates professional maturity and a growth mindset—qualities that don't go unnoticed.\n\n## Managing Your Emotions During and After Criticism\n\nHandling criticism gracefully in the moment is only part of the challenge. What you do with the emotions afterward matters just as much.\n\n### Give Yourself Permission to Feel\n\nAfter a difficult conversation, find a private space—even a bathroom stall works—and let yourself feel whatever comes up. Frustration, hurt, embarrassment, [anger](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fmaybe-you-need-anger-after-all): these are all normal responses. Trying to suppress or immediately \"fix\" these feelings often backfires. Acknowledge them, breathe through them, and let them move through you.\n\n### Watch Your Self-Talk\n\nAfter receiving criticism, it's easy to spiral into harsh self-judgment: \"I'm so stupid,\" \"I can't do anything right,\" \"Everyone thinks I'm incompetent.\" This internal pile-on doesn't help you improve—it just makes you feel worse.\n\nPractice self-compassion. Speak to yourself the way you'd speak to a colleague you respect who received the same feedback. Criticism about one aspect of your work doesn't define your entire professional identity.\n\n### Get Perspective\n\nIf you're struggling to process criticism, talk it through with someone you trust—a mentor, a friend outside work, or a therapist. Sometimes we need an outside perspective to see feedback clearly, separate the useful from the unfair, and regain our equilibrium. Just be mindful about venting at work, which can create its own complications.\n\n## Special Situations: When Criticism Gets Complicated\n\n### When You Disagree With the Feedback\n\nYou don't have to accept every piece of criticism as gospel truth. If you genuinely believe the feedback is off-base, it's appropriate to respectfully share your perspective—after you've listened fully and asked clarifying questions.\n\nFrame it collaboratively: \"I hear what you're saying about X. From my perspective, I approached it that way because Y. Can we discuss what might work best going forward?\" This opens a dialogue rather than creating a standoff.\n\n### When Criticism Is Delivered Poorly\n\nSometimes valid feedback comes wrapped in a terrible delivery—harsh tone, public embarrassment, poor timing. When this happens, try to separate the message from the messenger. Focus on whether there's something useful in the content, even if the packaging was awful.\n\nIf the delivery was particularly problematic, you might address it later: \"I valued the feedback you shared about my report. In the future, I'd find it easier to hear if we could discuss these things privately.\" This advocates for yourself while keeping the door open.\n\n### When Criticism Crosses Into Bullying\n\nThere's a clear line between tough feedback and workplace bullying. If criticism is personal, repetitive, public, and designed to demean rather than develop you, it's not feedback you should tolerate. Document specific incidents with dates, times, and witnesses. Report to HR or follow your company's complaint protocol. You deserve to work in an environment where feedback helps you grow, not one where it's used as a weapon.\n\n## Building Long-Term Resilience to Criticism\n\nThe goal isn't to become immune to criticism—that would require losing touch with reality. The goal is to build resilience: the ability to absorb feedback, learn from what's useful, and move forward without being derailed.\n\n### Seek Feedback Proactively\n\nCounterintuitively, asking for feedback regularly makes it less threatening when it arrives. When you actively seek input—\"What's one thing I could do better on this project?\"—you take control of the narrative and get comfortable with the process.\n\n### Build a Strong Professional Identity\n\nThe more secure you feel in your skills and value, the less criticism threatens your core sense of self. Keep a record of your accomplishments. Collect positive feedback. Remind yourself regularly of what you do well. This isn't ego—it's building a stable foundation that can absorb occasional criticism without crumbling.\n\n### Adopt a Growth Mindset\n\nStanford psychologist [Carol Dweck's research on mindset](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.psychologicalscience.org\u002Fobserver\u002Fdweck-growth-mindsets) shows that people who believe their abilities can be developed through effort and learning handle criticism far better than those who believe their talents are fixed. When you see feedback as information that helps you improve rather than a verdict on your worth, criticism becomes less personal and more practical.\n\n## Turning Criticism Into Your Career Advantage\n\nNobody loves being criticized. But learning to handle feedback with grace, extract what's useful, and respond professionally is a skill that will serve you throughout your career. It's not about being a pushover or accepting every critique without question. It's about being mature enough to learn from others' observations, [confident enough](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fbooks-for-confidence) to advocate for yourself when appropriate, and resilient enough to keep growing regardless of what comes your way.\n\nThe next time someone offers you feedback—even the uncomfortable kind—try to see it as an opportunity disguised as a [challenge](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Freal-stories-my-biggest-challenge-at-work). The professionals who thrive aren't the ones who never receive criticism. They're the ones who know exactly what to do with it.\n\n## FAQs About Handling Criticism at Work\n\n### How do I stop taking criticism so personally?\n\nTry to separate your work from your identity and not [let your job define you](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fjob-define-us) as a person. Criticism of a project or behavior isn't criticism of who you are as a person. Remind yourself that everyone receives feedback—it's part of professional growth, not evidence of inadequacy.\n\n### What should I say when I receive unexpected criticism?\n\nA safe response is: \"Thank you for sharing that. I'd like to take some time to think about what you've said. Can we follow up on this tomorrow?\" This buys you time to process without appearing defensive.\n\n### How do I handle criticism from someone I don't respect?\n\nFocus on the content rather than the source. Even flawed messengers can deliver valid observations. Extract any useful information, then determine whether their opinion should carry weight in your professional development.\n\n### Is it okay to cry after receiving criticism at work?\n\nStrong emotions are normal. If you feel tears coming during a conversation, it's okay to excuse yourself briefly. Afterward, allow yourself to process privately. Crying doesn't mean you're unprofessional—it means you're human.\n\n### How often should I ask for feedback?\n\nRegular check-ins—monthly or after major projects—help normalize feedback and prevent surprises. Frame requests specifically: \"What's one thing I could improve?\" rather than generic \"How am I doing?\" questions.\n\n### What if I disagree with my performance review?\n\nRequest a follow-up meeting to discuss specific points. Come prepared with examples that support your perspective. Focus on finding common ground and clarifying expectations going forward rather than arguing about the past.\n\n### How can I tell if criticism is constructive or just mean?\n\nConstructive criticism is specific, actionable, and focused on behavior or outcomes. Destructive criticism is vague, personal, and offers no path forward. Ask yourself: Does this help me understand what to do differently?\n\n#### Related Reading:\n\n• [Are You Suffering from Impostor Syndrome?](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-impostor-syndrome-and-how-it-can-affect-your-performance-at-work)\n\n• [How to Handle Conflict at Work](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fhow-to-handle-conflict-at-work)\n\n• [Effective Communication in the Workplace](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002F4-hacks-for-effective-communication-in-the-workplace)\n\n• [The Best Ways to Practice Self-Discipline](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fthe-best-ways-to-practice-self-discipline)\n\n• [Why Do We Procrastinate?](https:\u002F\u002Fwww.workingal.com\u002Farticles\u002Fwhy-do-we-procrastinate)\n\n\n\n\n\n","criticism-at-the-workplace-can-you-handle-it","how to handle criticism at work, dealing with criticism at work, receiving feedback professionally, constructive criticism, how to take criticism well, workplace feedback","Learn how to handle criticism at work like a pro. Discover proven strategies for receiving feedback gracefully, staying professional under pressure, and turning critiques into career growth.\n",{"id":346,"name":347,"alternativeText":302,"caption":302,"width":52,"height":53,"formats":348,"hash":369,"ext":56,"mime":59,"size":370,"url":371,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":372,"updatedAt":373},14,"critisism-at-work.jpg",{"large":349,"small":354,"medium":359,"thumbnail":364},{"ext":56,"url":350,"hash":351,"mime":59,"name":352,"path":61,"size":353,"width":63,"height":64},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Flarge_critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6.jpg","large_critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6","large_critisism-at-work.jpg",44.03,{"ext":56,"url":355,"hash":356,"mime":59,"name":357,"path":61,"size":358,"width":70,"height":71},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fsmall_critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6.jpg","small_critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6","small_critisism-at-work.jpg",14.7,{"ext":56,"url":360,"hash":361,"mime":59,"name":362,"path":61,"size":363,"width":77,"height":78},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fmedium_critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6.jpg","medium_critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6","medium_critisism-at-work.jpg",27.1,{"ext":56,"url":365,"hash":366,"mime":59,"name":367,"path":61,"size":368,"width":84,"height":85},"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fthumbnail_critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6.jpg","thumbnail_critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6","thumbnail_critisism-at-work.jpg",5.05,"critisism_at_work_1feb14fab6",91.9,"https:\u002F\u002Fworkingal.s3.eu-north-1.amazonaws.com\u002Fcritisism_at_work_1feb14fab6.jpg","2020-12-26T15:40:50.041Z","2020-12-26T15:40:50.057Z",{"id":6,"name":7,"slug":8,"createdAt":93,"updatedAt":94,"publishedAt":95},{"id":14,"name":174,"slug":175,"instagram":176,"facebook":177,"bio":178,"createdAt":179,"updatedAt":180,"publishedAt":181,"linkedIn":182,"avatar":376},{"id":14,"name":107,"alternativeText":108,"caption":108,"width":109,"height":109,"formats":377,"hash":190,"ext":112,"mime":115,"size":191,"url":192,"previewUrl":61,"provider":89,"provider_metadata":61,"createdAt":193,"updatedAt":194},{"thumbnail":378},{"ext":112,"url":186,"hash":187,"mime":115,"name":188,"path":61,"size":189,"width":118,"height":118},"https:\u002F\u002Fmedia.workingal.com\u002Fcritisism_at_work_1feb14fab6.jpg",{"pagination":381},{"start":382,"limit":383,"total":197},0,5]