The Age of Uncertainty: What Workplace Instablity is Doing to Your Brain
Sustained Uncertainty at Work: Why It Hurts Your Brain and What Helps
Host Leslie Poston discusses sustained workplace uncertainty and its psychological effects, citing an APA Monitor on Psychology article and survey data showing widespread job insecurity, low engagement, and feelings of being replaceable or invisible—especially among workers under 25. She explains research finding peak stress at maximum uncertainty and connects it to ongoing “maybe” conditions created by economic instability, policy shifts, AI restructuring, and layoffs at profitable companies, which sever the link between effort and security and contribute to survivor syndrome, reduced collaboration, and morale gaps between HR and executives. Declining trust and weak communication—highlighted by Edelman and Gallup findings—intensify uncertainty, while workplace ostracism can activate pain-related brain regions and disproportionately affects women of color. She offers limits-aware coping ideas: reduce self-blame, assess whether uncertainty is temporary or permanent, diversify identity beyond work, and evaluate whether leadership will tell the truth.
00:00 Welcome and Setup
00:21 Workplace Uncertainty Data
01:48 Why Uncertainty Hurts
02:37 Living in Maybe
04:03 Profit Driven Layoffs
06:30 Survivor Syndrome Fallout
08:01 Trust Makes It Bearable
10:03 Manager Pipeline Breakdown
10:40 Invisibility and Ostracism
12:25 What You Can Do
13:09 Action Steps That Help
15:46 Closing Thoughts
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Host Leslie Poston discusses sustained workplace uncertainty and its psychological effects, citing an APA Monitor on Psychology article and survey data showing widespread job insecurity, low engagement, and feelings of being replaceable or invisible—especially among workers under 25. She explains research finding peak stress at maximum uncertainty and connects it to ongoing “maybe” conditions created by economic instability, policy shifts, AI restructuring, and layoffs at profitable companies, which sever the link between effort and security and contribute to survivor syndrome, reduced collaboration, and morale gaps between HR and executives. Declining trust and weak communication—highlighted by Edelman and Gallup findings—intensify uncertainty, while workplace ostracism can activate pain-related brain regions and disproportionately affects women of color. She offers limits-aware coping ideas: reduce self-blame, assess whether uncertainty is temporary or permanent, diversify identity beyond work, and evaluate whether leadership will tell the truth.
00:00 Welcome and Setup
00:21 Workplace Uncertainty Data
01:48 Why Uncertainty Hurts
02:37 Living in Maybe
04:03 Profit Driven Layoffs
06:30 Survivor Syndrome Fallout
08:01 Trust Makes It Bearable
10:03 Manager Pipeline Breakdown
10:40 Invisibility and Ostracism
12:25 What You Can Do
13:09 Action Steps That Help
15:46 Closing Thoughts
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