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Word to the wise, steer clear of office gossip – Metro US

Word to the wise, steer clear of office gossip

Office gossip can buzz back to the wrong ears and sting like a bee.

Which is why it’s better, career counsellors advise, to float like a butterfly above the cubicle cliques and petty politics that transform even the most professional bureau into a snake pit.

“In some environments, the office can really be like high school,” career coach Pamela Skillings notes. “There are all these cliques, and people who are favoured at one time. Who you’re hanging out with can be perceived as taking sides.”

If your colleagues have you typecast as an office mean girl or a card-carrying Boys Club lackey, it’s likely because you’ve over idolized the catty friendships you’ve formed.

“You need to get away from that, even if you think you’re working with the coolest people in the universe,” Skillings adds.

“Diversify your friendships,” concurs workplace relationship expert Courtney Anderson.

That means extending a lunch invite to the shy paper shufflers and fixed-place cubicle-statues who rarely say “yes.” It could mean dropping by a department you don’t normally graze, or bringing pizza to the interns.

For the truly self-unaware, achieving non-alignment in the office realpolitik could also require keeping a paper tally of the number of critical and backbiting comments you let slip past the filter.

“We usually can’t see how bad it is, and we need to get empirical data,” she says. “Once we have that moment of truth where we fact that data, oftentimes, it’s shocking.”

Some of the unhappiest moments between colleagues come during happy hour. Over half-off pints of froth -— or while rocking around Christmas trees and jack-o-lanterns of holiday parties -— coworkers are all too likely to give their verbal inhibitions the night off, Anderson says.