The Denver Post

Everyone is not doing OK, but back at work anyway

- By Emma Goldberg © The New York Times Co.

It’s exceptiona­lly difficult to get someone to crack a smile, let alone laugh, in a corporate event hosted on Zoom, but comedian Dani Klein Modisett finds ways. One game she likes to play during her laughter workshops involves asking participan­ts to each name five items in a category — for example, things in their refrigerat­or — as fast as they can, after which everyone else chants: “Those are five things!” Eventually people loosen up. They start giggling. (Maybe you had to be there.)

But in recent months she has noticed attendees logging in to the sessions more tense than ever. Some arrive looking for levity, but also processing tragedy.

“I’m glad I showed up,” one participan­t said. “But my brother-inlaw just died.”

People are going into performanc­e reviews, brainstorm­ing sessions and the office with all kinds of grief, swinging between the banal and the crushing. Small problems feel large. Large problems feel colossal. And with mental health care hard to obtain and afford, workers are trying to fill the gaps.

“There’s this sense of ‘I don’t know how much longer I can keep doing this,’ ” said Klein Modisett, whose organizati­on, Laughter on Call, has run more than 350 events since its founding three years ago. “We want to hold out the possibilit­y we can laugh, but it’s all becoming too much.” Even the most scripted Hollywood event went sideways, its typical polish replaced with raw emotion: a slap from one of the film industry’s biggest stars. “We’re all feeling our way around being together when we don’t know what each other’s state of well-being is,” said Chantalle Couba, 46, a diversity, equity and inclusion consultant in North Carolina. “You go to a three-day off-site — or to the Oscars — and you find out people are different. People are threadbare. They’re very anxious.” For the past two years, people have struggled to do their work — whether in hospitals or restaurant­s, in shops or schools — while knotted up with the fear and uncertaint­y about the COVID-19 cri-sis For the subset of Americans who had the luxury of working from home, their profession­al lives mirrored their personal ones: upended. They answered emails from their couches, spoke to teammates on Zoom and re

fashioned daily schedules to accommodat­e this new remote-work era

Now, some have gotten the message that their employers are trying to restore an old status quo. Dozens of companies are calling workers back to the office: Microsoft, Goldman Sachs, Chevron, The Washington Post. And some worry that their teams aren’t prepared for the emotional transition awaiting a workforce on edge.

“Gone are the days of put your head down,” said Desiree Coleman-fry, a diversity, equity and inclusion executive.

In a Mckinsey study of more than 2,900 people last year, onethird of those who had just returned to the office said going back had negatively affected their mental health.

The will-they-won’t-they saga of office reopenings hasn’t helped, making it tough to prepare for a new routine.

For some workers, there’s the difficulty of giving up habits they formed at home; for others, there’s the prospect of facing slights, insensitiv­e comments and cliques. And many, knowing that they’ve changed in the past two years, don’t feel ready to get reacquaint­ed with their teams.

“So much of our humanity has been exposed,” Klein Modisett said. “There’s kind of no turning back. We can’t put the genie back in the bottle.”

But the workaday duties drag on, sometimes in jarring contrast to the magnitude of world events. For Kelly Mccomas, 25, a designer in Brooklyn, the dissonance between following crises in the news and fulfilling her profession­al obligation­s is clearest at the start of her meetings. On a recent video call with a team in Poland, she said, the opening moments of the conversati­on made clear that nobody knew how to discuss Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

“We kick off a meeting and ask how everything’s going, and they’re like, ‘Well, there’s a war,’ ” Mccomas recalled. “And we’re like, ‘Yeah, there’s a war.’ And then we go into the design meeting.”

Supervisor­s are finding that they are called on to help people navigate personal challenges, whether or not they have the training to do so. Kim Theobald, head of human resources at RCM&D, an insurance brokerage, started facilitati­ng a weekly call for managers, giving them space to raise questions about how to support workers.

“I’ve had a lot more employees reach out to me due to their anxiety, often saying they can’t pinpoint the reason for it,” Theobald said. “I’ve had phone calls from managers saying, ‘This is what I did, and I hope I handled it correctly.’ ”

Some companies are trying to directly address mental health challenges that their workers may be facing. Arrivia, a travel business, said use of its “employee assistance” program, which provides no-cost therapy, had increased tenfold since the start of the pandemic. The company also has surveyed workers about their needs around returning to the office and has written a plan that puts a priority on flexibilit­y, allowing many people to work from home if they prefer.

Real, a mental health app that offers programmin­g on topics including relationsh­ips and body positivity, plans to pilot a four-day workweek, running next week through June, to give employees more time to rest and focus on their families. The idea came from Real’s founder, Ariela Safira, who recognized after the December holidays that she was experienci­ng a sense of numbness fueled by overwork.

Apps and even paid time off can do only so much. For many, the angst runs deep, exacerbate­d by the emotional gap between their work responsibi­lities and the realities of 2022. Business leaders may talk often about authentici­ty, yet many of their employees are unsure how to present themselves to colleagues when they’re struggling.

“It feels crazy to be expected to keep your cool and go on with your life,” Mccomas said. “I don’t know if I can bring my full self to work anymore because it feels so disingenuo­us with what’s happening outside work.”

And the vocabulary of the workplace is expanding, as managers try to find the language needed to check in on employees. They’re learning to ask about challenges that go beyond deadlines and deals, conversati­ons that don’t always feel natural in a sterile office environmen­t.

Jennifer Strauel, head of human resources at Arrivia, has heard from employees who experience­d sickness, relationsh­ip breakdowns and the loss of loved ones.

“We’re getting comfortabl­e using words about feelings instead of just concrete business topics,” Strauel said.

 ?? Ana Tortos, © The New York Times Co. ?? Dozens of companies are calling workers back to the office, including Microsoft, Goldman Sachs, Chevron and The Washington Post. And some worry that their teams aren’t prepared for the emotional transition awaiting a work force on edge.
Ana Tortos, © The New York Times Co. Dozens of companies are calling workers back to the office, including Microsoft, Goldman Sachs, Chevron and The Washington Post. And some worry that their teams aren’t prepared for the emotional transition awaiting a work force on edge.

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