Over the course of my career, I've had few PTSD issues that impacted the workplace. Now, that I'm at the top of my organization, the stress of my job is very high (i.e. dealing with legal issues, death of a student, building fire, can't dismiss children because there's a dead body nearby, lock downs, terminating employees). That said, I LOVE my job (makes me feel like I make a difference in the world)!! In my personal life, I'm about to be an empty-nester (twins graduate next month, son is in his 3rd year of college) and my marriage is on the rocks. So....very stressed in all aspects of my life. Day to day, I seem to handle it well.
The Issue: Until about 2 years ago, I always reported to a female. Now, that I'm at the top of my organization, I report to the board AND to a male that is at the management organization (it's kinda like how we have 3 branches of government with checks and balances in place so that no one person has all the power). While this male is NOT threatening in a physical manner (he's in his 70s), every time it's evaluation time, I fall apart. He thinks I'm an emotional mess. He knows a little about my past as I asked my co-worker to fill him in hopes of not having issues. Before the promotion, she was my boss for 15 years so she's seen the handful of times a man has elicited a bad reaction. And...she knows I have no issues with women giving me criticism. I have weekly meetings with this supervisor with no issues unless we start talking about my performance. I react to everything he says.....if it's positive, I feel that it's not authentic and take the complement with a grain of salt...plus it feels very uncomfortable. It's it's negative, I cry uncontrollably. During our weekly meetings, I'm on edge the entire time (it's just the 2 of us given the confidentiality of the topics we discuss). He even started bringing me lunch to make me feel more at ease.
Type of Abuse: Sexual, physical, emotional, torture by stepdad; neglected by mom, abandoned by mom, mom blamed me for losing the love of her life, etc, etc, etc
Known Triggers: Men of power saying anything even a little bit negative, men sitting too close or men sitting on both sides of me, electricity, having back to the door, being trapped in any way, men using emotion to get result ("I was disappointed that the 4 of you were unable to agree on..."
My Reactions: Hyperventilate, uncontrollable crying, jumping out of seat (without even thinking) and then pretend like I had to get something, sweating, nervous voice, shaking
Within the next 2 weeks, I'll be getting my evaluation. One of my performance goals is to not get emotional which makes me bad....asking me to not melt down is like me asking him not to be a man.
I was wondering if there's something I can read or somewhere I can go to get help. I've had 4 therapy appointments to date which only seemed to make me worse and listened to podcasts from Joyce Meyers (which was helpful). I know I should have been in therapy for years. I'm hoping for a "fake it until I make it" type of fix. I embarrass myself SOOO much during evaluations and now he's concerned about my emotional state. I only get like this with him and once with a few male members of the board. If a male, who was lower on the org chart, gave me criticism or even told me off....no problem.
Please recommend books, articles, PTSD conferences for executive leaders, or whatever you think I need.
Thanks!
The Issue: Until about 2 years ago, I always reported to a female. Now, that I'm at the top of my organization, I report to the board AND to a male that is at the management organization (it's kinda like how we have 3 branches of government with checks and balances in place so that no one person has all the power). While this male is NOT threatening in a physical manner (he's in his 70s), every time it's evaluation time, I fall apart. He thinks I'm an emotional mess. He knows a little about my past as I asked my co-worker to fill him in hopes of not having issues. Before the promotion, she was my boss for 15 years so she's seen the handful of times a man has elicited a bad reaction. And...she knows I have no issues with women giving me criticism. I have weekly meetings with this supervisor with no issues unless we start talking about my performance. I react to everything he says.....if it's positive, I feel that it's not authentic and take the complement with a grain of salt...plus it feels very uncomfortable. It's it's negative, I cry uncontrollably. During our weekly meetings, I'm on edge the entire time (it's just the 2 of us given the confidentiality of the topics we discuss). He even started bringing me lunch to make me feel more at ease.
Type of Abuse: Sexual, physical, emotional, torture by stepdad; neglected by mom, abandoned by mom, mom blamed me for losing the love of her life, etc, etc, etc
Known Triggers: Men of power saying anything even a little bit negative, men sitting too close or men sitting on both sides of me, electricity, having back to the door, being trapped in any way, men using emotion to get result ("I was disappointed that the 4 of you were unable to agree on..."
My Reactions: Hyperventilate, uncontrollable crying, jumping out of seat (without even thinking) and then pretend like I had to get something, sweating, nervous voice, shaking
Within the next 2 weeks, I'll be getting my evaluation. One of my performance goals is to not get emotional which makes me bad....asking me to not melt down is like me asking him not to be a man.
I was wondering if there's something I can read or somewhere I can go to get help. I've had 4 therapy appointments to date which only seemed to make me worse and listened to podcasts from Joyce Meyers (which was helpful). I know I should have been in therapy for years. I'm hoping for a "fake it until I make it" type of fix. I embarrass myself SOOO much during evaluations and now he's concerned about my emotional state. I only get like this with him and once with a few male members of the board. If a male, who was lower on the org chart, gave me criticism or even told me off....no problem.
Please recommend books, articles, PTSD conferences for executive leaders, or whatever you think I need.
Thanks!