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Why It’s Ok To Cry (Even At Work)

Marie Claire news: Depressed woman

As a documentary presenter, Jenny Kleeman can keep her cool even in the most unimaginable situations, but she has a shameful secret – off-camera she cries at the slightest thing.

It should have been my moment of triumph. I was about to finish the documentary I’d been working on for months. Instead, exhausted after days accommodating everyone’s wishes into the finished script, I was sitting next to the most senior man in the company when I realised I was about to do one of the most shameful, embarrassing, career-wrecking things you can imagine.

All he said was, ‘You don’t mind if I take a quick look, do you?’ and that horrible but familiar lump rose in my throat and my cheeks turned hot. My eyes began to prickle and brim, I stared at my screen, determined not to look at him, but it was too late, he knew I was crying. He watched in disbelief, awkward beside me, as the other heads in the office turned towards my desk.

Now, I’m sure most of us have cried in public at least once, but it’s not an option for me. It’s my job to be brave. I’m a TV presenter who reports from little-known, often dangerous places. I’ve interviewed murderers in Turkey, paedophiles in the Czech Republic and corrupt gurus in
India. And none of this made me break down.

Television critics have described me as ‘fearless’, ‘dauntless’, and even ‘ballsy’, but the truth is, I can burst into tears with little warning. It’s a secret that threatens to undermine each working day.

When a woman cries at work, people perceive her as an overemotional, volatile wreck – the last person you’d trust with a demanding assignment – or a scheming manipulator who knows that tears are the trump card that will make everyone back off and let her have her way.

When I began presenting, it was not the documentary’s distressing scenes that made me cry, but exhaustion, frustration and stress.

I ended up in a comfy chair in Tina’s consulting room. A psychologist friend recommended her, as he thought that Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) could solve my problem in four sessions. CBT teaches you how to deal with thought patterns that lead to certain kinds of
behaviour.

‘What goes through your mind before you’re about to cry?’ asked Tina gently. ‘Nothing,’ I said. ‘That’s the point. I just feel like it’s going to happen and then it does. I can’t control it. That’s why it’s so humiliating.’ ‘We need to work out what thoughts are triggering those feelings,’ she said. ‘Why do you think you get so stressed about things?’ ‘Because I want to do a good job and make the film a success,’ I replied. ‘Then we need to get to the bottom of why success matters so much to you,’ she insisted.

After five sessions, I decided it wasn’t for me.

Meditation seemed a better option. A local group taught me the basics. The first time I did it, I felt energised, alert and in control. Meditation is no magic cure – it takes daily practice and concentration to see the long-term benefits – but it came surprisingly easy to me. I was sure I’d be able to carry this peace with me into my daily working life and banish office tears forever.

Meditation hadn’t stopped me crying, but it had taught me to accept it for what it is – a coping mechanism my body uses to get rid of pent-up emotions. I wasn’t crying because I was weak, I was crying to allow myself to be strong, to expel the tension so I could complete the task in hand with a clear head. A minute later, I walked back into the office with confidence.

I’ve discovered that, when you’re brave enough to be so honest about yourself, no one thinks you’re weak.

Have you ever cried at work, or do you keep your emotions buttoned up during the day? Tell us your stories in the comments box below.


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Phew! I'm glad it is not just me. I work in Construction in a very male dominated workplace, when things get really stressful for me I cry and I cannot stop it. I have always been cross at myself because it makes me look weak but I'm not, and I don't cry because I am emotional I cry generally because I am angry and frustrated.
Comment by abigail fletcher on July 29 19:56

Thank you so much for your honesty. I really enjoyed this article - although it's a shame this version is so much shorter than the piece published in the magazine.
Comment by Naomi on July 30 12:04

I used to cry at work out of frustration and anger rather than actually being upset. If I felt a situation was particularly unjust or unfair which you can often find in office politics, the water works would just come. I've managed to control it over time, because as much as I would love for the whole office to be able to empathise and understand that frustration was the cause. To most it, still just looks like you over emotional and in my case I found it can be used as an obstacle for progression.
Comment by Mrs T on September 15 22:34

At the present time I have a close family member who is suffering bullying in the workplace, very subtle and difficult to manage.
Often, when you are a young member of staff with little experience and a mortgage to pay, leaving is not an option,especially as you need a good reference.
Yes, the close family member has been reduced to crying, as the atmosphere and behaviour of staff, including the senior management has been very poor.
This has gone on for a protracted period of time.
Consequently this week my close family member has been signed off with work related stress by a doctor, who wishes the close family member to take antidepressants, such is the intolerable situation.
Comment by Helen Drury on November 25 14:32

Hi

I'm glad that I'm not alone. I am also a persistant cryer at work. If I get stressed, frustrated or angry crying is my outlet. I know I'm not depressed, I have been down that road and its never made me any better. In previous jobs I have made jokes about it, but in my current job its frowned upon and its being held against me which makes me feel worse. I have now got to the point that I don't know who I am anymore and lost direction. I'm worried if I changed career I would still be the same.
Comment by Mandy on March 09 16:53

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