Why you should bring your whole self to work The Way We Work a TED series

Transcriber: Ivana Korom
Reviewer: Joanna Pietrulewicz

A leader is steady, firm,
decisive, unwavering.

Never let ‘em see you sweat,
always have an answer.

[The Way We Work]

My name is Dan, I’m a partner
at a global creative consultancy.

But there’s another side to me:

Carrie Dragshaw,

the character I created on Instagram.

As I thought about my double life,
I couldn’t help but wonder …

When your true self
is a little nontraditional,

how much of it can you really
bring to the office?

For some of us is authenticity off-limits?

For the first 10 years of my career,

I thought there was
one way to be a leader:

decisive and serious.

But that’s not me.

So I’d put on basically
office drag to fit the role:

I’d talk in a deeper voice,
try to hold in my hand motions.

I’m someone who gets
really excited about things,

so I’d temper that.

I had this little voice
in my head, telling me,

“You’re too gay,
too feminine, too flamboyant.”

I had one well-intentioned
adviser who said,

“Everyone knows you’re gay.
And that’s great.

But you don’t need to beat them
over the head with it.”

Cut to: me in a tutu, for Halloween 2016.

I dressed up as my favorite
TV show character, Carrie Bradshaw,

thinking my friends
would get a kick out of it.

And then, things got crazy.

The post went viral,
and at first it was pure fun.

I started getting these incredible
messages from people

about how happy it made them,

how it encouraged them
to be their authentic selves.

And I started to think,

maybe this is the time to tell that
little voice in my head to just shut up

and let myself be me.

But then things got a little too big.

Carrie Dragshaw was everywhere –
In the “New York Post”, “US Weekly” –

and I got terrified:

“What would my bosses think?

Would my coworkers
still respect me as a leader?

What would my clients think?”

I thought I was going to have to
get a different job.

But then, something happened,
something small.

I got a text from my boss,
it wasn’t long, it just said,

“Wow, Cosmo!”

With a link to an article
that had just gone up about me.

And it let me put that little,
scared voice away

and just be excited
about this whole new world,

rather than freaked out.

That’s the power of one person,

sometimes all it takes is one ally
to make you feel comfortable.

And my coworkers
started acting differently.

They became more open,
more playful with me,

it was as if knowing this other side of me

gave them permission
to be more of themselves as well.

I thought that openness and vulnerability

would actually decrease
my standing with my team.

But it’s done the opposite.

Two years in,

I never could have imagined that this
part of me would not just be embraced,

but could actually help my career.

Now, I’m lucky.

I work in New York City,

in an office where creativity is valued

and I was already pretty established
in my career when all of this started.

Maybe that’s you, maybe it isn’t.

But all of this has taught me so much

about just the importance
of bringing your whole self to work.

And it’s really challenged
my own misperceptions

about what it takes to be successful.

There’s no one kind of way to be a leader.

It’s about finding your strengths
and finding ways to amplify them.

Before, if a meeting was hard,
I’d put on my perfect leader mask.

Now, I can say,
“Gosh, that was frustrating.”

We can talk about challenges
and struggles in an open way,

rather than everybody pretending
that they’re fine until it’s too late.

Concealing an identity takes work.

Think of all the wasted energy
spent pretending,

wishing you were someone different.

What’s most interesting to me, though,
is that in this big study of covering,

93 percent of those
who say they’re doing it

also believe their organization
values inclusion.

So clearly, our workplaces
and all of our strange inner voices

have a long way to go on acceptance.

There’s a big difference
between adapting and disguising.

And I think I learned that a little late.

Personally, I’m taking all of this
as a call to be the ally

who, like my boss did for me,

lets people know that it’s OK to open up.

If you’re gay, or proud
of your ethnic background,

or have a disability
or are deeply religious,

see what it’s like
being your full self at work.

You might be pleasantly surprised.

抄写员:Ivana Korom
审稿人:Joanna

Pietrulewicz 领导者是稳定、坚定、
果断、坚定不移的。

永远不要让他们看到你的汗水,
总是有答案。

[我们的工作方式]

我叫丹,我是
一家全球创意咨询公司的合伙人。

但我还有另一面:

Carrie Dragshaw

,我在 Instagram 上创建的角色。

一想到我的双重生活,
我不禁想……

当你的真实
自我有点非传统时,

你真正能
带多少到办公室?

对于我们中的一些人来说,真实性是禁区吗?

在我职业生涯的前 10 年,

我认为有
一种方法可以成为领导者:

果断和认真。

但那不是我。

所以我基本上会穿上
办公室装扮来适应这个角色:

我会用更深沉的声音说话,
试着控制我的手部动作。

我是一个
对事情非常兴奋的人,

所以我会缓和一点。

我脑子里有个小
声音,告诉我,

“你太同性恋了,
太女性化了,太浮夸了。”

我有一位好心的
顾问说:

“每个人都知道你是同性恋
。这很好。

但你不需要用它打败他们
。”

切到:我穿着芭蕾舞短裙,参加 2016 年万圣节。

我打扮成我最喜欢的
电视节目角色 Carrie Bradshaw,

以为我的朋友
会从中获得乐趣。

然后,事情变得疯狂。

这篇文章在网上疯传
,起初它很有趣。

我开始从人们那里得到这些令人难以置信的
信息,

关于它让他们多么快乐,

它如何鼓励
他们做真实的自己。

我开始想,

也许现在是时候告诉
我脑海中的那个小声音闭嘴

,让自己成为我自己。

但后来事情变得有点太大了。

Carrie Dragshaw 无处不在——
在《纽约邮报》、《美国周刊》上

——我吓坏了:

“我的老板会怎么想

?我的同事
还会尊重我作为领导者吗

?我的客户会怎么想?”

我以为我将
不得不换一份工作。

但后来,发生了
一些小事。

我收到了老板的一条短信
,没多久,就说,

“哇,Cosmo!”

带有指向
刚刚发布的关于我的文章的链接。

它让我把那个小小的、
害怕的声音移开


对这个全新的世界感到兴奋,

而不是吓坏了。

这就是一个人的力量,

有时只需要一个盟友
就能让你感到舒服。

我的同事
开始采取不同的行动。

他们变得更加开放,
对我更加顽皮,

就好像知道我的另一面

让他们也允许他们
做更多自己。

我认为开放和脆弱

实际上会降低
我在团队中的地位。

但它做了相反的事情。

两年过去了,

我从来没有想过
我的这一部分不仅会被接受,

而且实际上可以帮助我的职业生涯。

现在,我很幸运。

我在纽约市工作,

在一个重视创造力的办公室里,

当这一切开始时,我的职业生涯已经相当成熟。

也许是你,也许不是。

但是所有这些都教会了我很多

关于将整个自我投入工作的重要性。

它确实挑战了

我自己对成功所需的误解。

没有一种方法可以成为领导者。

这是关于找到你的优势
并找到放大它们的方法。

以前,如果开会很难,
我会戴上完美的领导面具。

现在,我可以说,
“天哪,这太令人沮丧了。”

我们可以
以开放的方式谈论挑战和斗争,

而不是每个人都
假装自己很好,直到为时已晚。

隐藏身份需要工作。

想想所有浪费
在假装上的精力,

希望你是一个与众不同的人。

不过,对我来说最有趣的
是,在这项关于覆盖的大型研究中,

93% 的
人说他们正在这样做,他们

也相信他们的组织
重视包容性。

很明显,我们的工作场所
和我们所有奇怪的内心声音

要被接受还有很长的路要走。 适应和伪装

是有很大区别的

我想我知道的有点晚了。

就我个人而言,我把所有这一切都
视为成为盟友的号召

,就像我的老板为我所做的那样,

让人们知道敞开心扉是可以的。

如果你是同性恋,或者
为你的种族背景感到自豪,

或者有残疾
或者是虔诚的宗教,

看看
你在工作中的完整自我是什么感觉。

你可能会感到惊喜。