Always making sure your Teams status is set to “Available.” Leaving the lights on when you go home to make it look like you’re still at the office. Promising to stay plugged in while you’re on vacation. Sound familiar?
Somehow, at many offices, the 40-hour workweek has turned into the “bare minimum.” And being the first one in and last one out is expected for people who want to excel in their careers. Not just that, but when we do show up, it’s not enough to have a physical presence, we need to appear to be uber accessible across a range of mediums!
If you’ve felt this way, you’re not alone. Conventional career wisdom practically encourages it. The message we’re given is: if you want to stand out at work, you need to extend yourself cheerfully and overdeliver. That way, you don’t leave a speck of doubt in people’s minds that you’re capable, productive, and worthy. Employers know this and often leverage it –and in plenty of cases, they reward employees according to just out-of-reach standards.
We need to stop normalizing work environments that praise overwork. Often, we don’t even think twice about logging on after we’re home for the day “just to finish something real quick,” or picking up the phone while we’re on a family vacation to help solve an issue.
We don’t even realize these actions contribute to the toxicity because we have been conditioned to view “overwork” as synonymous with “passionate” and “productive.”
Here are a few corporate phrases that we often say and hear without batting an eyelash – but they each contribute to toxicity and normalize working ourselves to the bone.
1. “You won’t believe how late I left the office last night!”
When someone says, “You won’t believe how late I left the office last night,” it can create all sorts of bad vibes – even though the speaker might be super-proud of themselves. On one hand, it can make people who left work on time feel guilty or inadequate. It can also make those employees resent or envy their co-worker who has the capacity to put in that many hours.
If we aren’t careful about what we say about our workload, we can create an environment in which some people earn admiration for working late and others don’t feel good about themselves when they haven’t. Staying late at the office isn’t something that will make everyone happy at work—and can set employees up for failure by creating expectations that are hard to meet.
Instead of glorifying staying late at the office, let’s praise people who set healthy boundaries, who leave loudly (rather than slinking out of the office secretly at 5 p.m.) when it comes to their time and workload!
2. “I can’t even remember the last time I took a real vacation.”
A whopping 55 percent of U.S. workers didn’t use all of their paid time off in 2022, and about a third of employees don’t even have the option to take paid vacations. In addition to normalizing 50+ hour workweeks, most working people view vacations as a luxury they can’t afford – whether that means there isn’t any room in their financial budget or they simply don’t think they can spend a week or two away from work without (direct or indirect) consequences.
According to New View Strategies, 32 percent of Americans feel guilty for taking time off work, and the number increases to 41 percent when going away for seven days or longer. Over a third of workers also regret going on vacation because they need to double up their workload before they leave or when they return.









