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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To ask for your advice?

5 replies

advisemeifyouplease · 09/12/2018 18:17

Hi everyone, posting here for traffic as I’m hoping there are some wise HR/employment law experts here. Any advice would be MUCH appreciated, so thank you :)

Background (bit long sorry but relevant):
I work for a large multinational. I’ve been at the company about 4 years, and I’ve been promoted once.

I’m in my late 20s, and in June of this year, my fiancé of 7 years and I went on a break and subsequently broke up. This has been the most painful experience of my life so far, and really knocked me for six. We lived together, we were half way through buying a house together, I was closer to his mum than I am to my own, and it’s been a very emotional few months.

I didn’t tell anyone at work at the time but it definitely affected my performance at work. In July, my manager questioned my work and set out various projects/deadlines on paper which were sent to me in an email. I panicked and ended up crying in front of her the next day, and told her about the break up. She was pretty neutral but asked if I had supportive friends/family, which I confirmed. A few weeks after that I discovered that my ex-fiancé was already seeing someone, and that they had already been dating 4 weeks after I moved out (or so I thought). I found out at work and couldn’t stop crying, so I told my manager and asked if I could work from home the rest of the day, which she agreed to. Other than that, I’ve not mentioned this break up to her or other senior people at work and I’ve not taken any proper time off until recently. But the emotional repercussions have definitely been going on in the background. My manager also didn’t again bring up the projects/deadlines she’d sent to me by email.

Fast forward to October: a close family member had a serious health scare, and at this time I was still in touch with my ex-fiance’s mum, so I mentioned this to her. My ex-fiancé then got in touch with me to say he hoped everything was okay, which led to us having contact again and considering getting back together. Over a very difficult few weeks I discovered that he had actually gone on holiday with his new girlfriend 6 days after we started our break, that they had met before I actually moved out of the house we shared together, and various other things which he had been hiding from me. It was extremely traumatic. We basically went through a second break up, and I also had to ‘break up’ with his parents, as I knew we had to stop all contact. It was the right decision and a relief in a lot of ways to find these things out, but also just utterly shit, and again I was super emotional and distracted throughout all of this. During most of this time, my manager was actually away on holiday for a month, and then I went away for two weeks of holiday, so we had a good 6 weeks of no work contact.

The day I got back from holiday (end of Nov) my manager sat me down and told me that she’s worried that I’m going to struggle in my annual review in January/February, that my performance had been ‘noticed’, that there had been feedback that I’ve not been very available or easy to get hold of, and that there had been a few ‘misses’. She said she thinks there’s still time, but the previous plan we had agreed on was out of date and sent me a new plan with new deadlines. I mostly listened in the meeting and tried not to say anything because I’m terribly scared. Since then I’ve been knuckling down and really trying to deliver. The projects/deadlines are intense and it’s meant working late nights and weekends. But I’m terrified that it won’t be enough and that I’ll be put on an employment improvement plan at my annual review.

I’m posting here because I’d really like to get advice from anyone who’s an expert in HR and/or employment law, on the best way to handle this situation. Can anyone advise me on the following:
•Should I talk more to my manager about what I’ve been through over the last 6 months?
•Should I acknowledge/agree that I have not been performing?
•I also have an eating disorder which I get lots of support for but flared up over the last 6 months due to all the stress/emotional pain – should I mention this? I’d prefer not to, but is it in my best interest?
•What will happen in Jan/Feb if I don’t meet the bar for my annual review?
•Will her manager (my skip manager) be aware of all this? I’m supposed to have monthly catch ups with this skip manager - should I open up about everything? How open should I be?
•What if I can’t meet some of the new deadlines? I have already missed one due to the massively intense workload of 1 specific project – my manager is aware this has been pushed back, but will this come back to bite me come Jan/Feb?
•Do you have any other advice on how I can manage this? I just really want to get out of the woods and back on an even keel with my life, frankly.

For context, I don’t think my manager is a horrible person, but she is not emotionally invested and is extremely critical/prickly (not just of me, across the board in all her interactions), and the whole atmosphere just now feels intensely oppressive. I am considering looking for a new job but I was hoping to buy a house in the new year, and I’d rather stay put for now if I can.

Any advice would be really, really gratefully appreciated.

OP posts:
HopefulCivilServant · 09/12/2018 21:46

Just bumping this for you, OP.

I’m so sorry to hear about your situation. Unfortunately, I don’t have any specific advice to give, but I’m sure that other members will have very useful guidance Flowers

FearLoveAndTheTimeMachine · 09/12/2018 21:59

OP do you have HR at your company? Ask them. Nobody here can really advise as a lot of this will rest on your organisation’s individual policies.

It’s great your manager has forewarned you now about your upcoming review as you have time to pull it back around instead of being blindsided in the meeting! Document everything and keep detailed records each Friday of everything you’ve achieved that week, the deadlines you’ve met, etc. For evidence for the review meeting. Make sure that you don’t just rely on your manager’s opinion on how you’re doing.

Your manager seems to have handled this fine, she’s given you clear objectives to meet and time to meet them. Opinions will differ on whether or not to tell work about a personal crisis. I favour being honest with my workplace if i were to go through anything that would affect my work because it’s a supportive place but others could equally say don’t give them a single thing to beat you with and keep work and personal life separate. If you had realised your performance was impacted you definitely should have been the one to address it though to show you’ve noticed and addressed it.

You sound very strong and like you’re an amazing person for having handled all of this with such grace and having missed no days of work in the meantime! Please don’t be scared of the performance review.

FearLoveAndTheTimeMachine · 09/12/2018 22:03

I also think it’d be good for you to get something in place each week where you can talk about how you’re feeling about work and the breakup, properly offload so that when you’re at work your focus is on work and you’re not trying to battle horrible emotions you’re suppresing. That might be a therapist (do your work offer it?) or a weekly email or call to the samaritans, but something.

Aquamarine1029 · 09/12/2018 22:06

I think you need to keep your professional and personal lives separate. If you need support for your personal life, get a therapist or go to friends and family. Your boss has business matters they are responsible for which I think you can understand. Your boss is not a doctor or a therapist and going to them with constant personal issues will not help your standing. When you're at work you're expected to do your job properly, which is not an unreasonable expectation. You've been through a lot, but so have most people and we all have to learn to cope.

MadeForThis · 09/12/2018 22:20

I agree as hard as it sounds your boss/employer can't continue to accept your lack of focus.

You have been through a lot and hopefully are coming out the other side but you need to try and switch off when you get to work. Take the time to detach from what's happening at home and focus on yourself and your future.

Your boss seems to have been very reasonable. But all your effort into meeting your objectives.

Being able to separate home and work is a hard skill to learn. But you must.

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