this post was submitted on 24 Dec 2025
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[–] Whats_your_reasoning@lemmy.world 6 points 22 hours ago* (last edited 22 hours ago)

I know nothing about IT and most of your comment went over my head, but this -

The moment, and I mean the first sign that she’s not 100% totally understanding what’s being discussed, she shuts down, gets dismissive and short, and refuses to hear anything further.

is a situation that I'm intimately familiar with. That's my mom. Me, I'm the autistic daughter that had to learn and develop her social skills on her own, in her adulthood years.

I have bad news. Despite nearly 37 years of knowing this type of person, I have not found any way that can consistently bypass their issues. Their reactions are built on how they feel, emotionally. Once that emotion is tied to an idea, they are stuck there until their feelings change.

For the dynamic between me and my mom, she's stuck in some old school thoughts (though she would deny it if told so.) Me, I'm a progressive weirdo living alternative lifestyles, and it started young. The idea of her kids making decisions she doesn't like makes her upset, but she doesn't acknowledge that. Instead, when she hears an idea she doesn't like (even if it's something we're excited about, like going to college), she goes silent and refuses to respond beyond little snippets of, "Stop it." Needless to say, such a response makes us feel terrible. That's why we've long since stopped sharing information with her. One of my brothers even got married without immediately telling her. Yeah, and she wonders why we don't call more often.

The good news is, there can be conditions to have things be understood. The bad news is, your relationship with her is a factor in having it go well. You'd also need time - my mom only softens up to ideas after a period of time had passed since she first learned of it. Sometimes it was weeks, sometimes it was months, but it seems she always needs a processing period to come around to things.

An important thing to note about such emotional thinkers is that the person giving them the information holds a lot of sway in how they receive that information. I've got a leg-up by being my mom's daughter, as that emotional attachment carries weight. For a boss, there's a lot more work to do... and I do not envy your situation.

Some people would recommend attempting to befriend the boss. But if you're like me, you know that's not going to happen. Even if you possessed the social skills to go that route, I imagine you'd find yourself exhausted by the effort in no time. I sure would. One of the reasons I dropped the idea of professional piloting was because I realized that in order to get a good job, you need to network with lots of (often rich or arrogant) people. I just plain don't have it in me to keep up such a charade.

Regardless, I've encountered the same behavior in bosses before as well. Unfortunately, I have not found any way to properly deal with them... short of going to their higher-ups or HR. Sometimes the higher-ups are as bad as the boss. Sometimes HR doesn't care. Sometimes somebody does care, but the bad boss targets you for having reported them. I've seen it all, I've worked under their thumbs, I've seen how rusty the gears are all the way up the machine.

Of note, I have learned that the phrase "hostile work environment" is more likely to get HR to stand up and act. This is a situation worth documenting. You might want to start taking note of the conversations, the specific words she uses, along with times and dates of when they occurred. Showing a pattern is important. It's also worth writing down the ways in which her behavior impacts your job performance.

As to dealing with immediate issues that need to be communicated to your boss, you might want to check your colleagues and see if any of them have better luck when talking to her. Although direct communication is usually the best option, it's possible your boss already has unclear negative feelings about you, and that's making it more difficult for her to listen to your words. (Sorry, bud.) Maybe having someone be the liaison between you would help her listen to the issues you're dealing with. I've had to do that before, and though it sucked to need another person to do the talking, at least some problems got taken care of.

Anyway, best of luck to you and your colleagues. I don't personally expect such a person to change, so I hope you find a way to wriggle out from under her irrational control.

Edit: Oh, and Merry Christmas to you, too!