When you go to work it can often feel like being part of a family. After all, teams supposedly foster this and your colleagues can soon come to resemble your actual family, warts and all.
In this book, the author examines the sometimes thorny world of office relationships and they can mesh, often without people even realising it, with others from the past. Family dynamics can come back to haunt you in later life.
There are several areas discussed which include defensiveness, imposter syndrome, people pleasing, fear of rejection, overachievement, personality clashes (who hasn’t had one of those), paranoia, fear of conflict and narcissism.
The author is a psychotherapist who uses real case histories from people undergoing counselling to illustrate how previous behaviours and experiences can be brought into the workplace unwittingly as the worker tries, often unknowingly, to replicate them. However, I would have liked more detail on how the people quoted dealt with it. I felt that the book really rattled along as it covered so many topics and perhaps if there had been less, they could have been covered in more detail. Also, if your manager or co-worker reminds you of say, an overbearing parent, what do you do? Leave, transfer to another department or live with it? It is written from the experiences of people who have acknowledged their problems and are seeking to change but what about the rest?
However, there were a lot of good insights in the book especially with imposter syndrome and overachievers. It was an interesting read but I felt that more detail and practical solutions would have improved it greatly.
My thanks to Ebury and penguin Random House and Netgalley for an ARC.