Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just say something like "enjoyed the nice weather this weekend" or "caught up on laundry." You don't need ot announce you discovered your husband has been having an affair with your sister.![]()
OP: An icebreaker I can handle but my issue is feeling forced to respond in our weekly meetings! Furthermore the sense I get is the responses should be cheery or exciting. No one wants to be the person who says, “I did laundry.” And since folks get asked specifically there’s no way to opt out if you’re not on the best mental space.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Just say something like "enjoyed the nice weather this weekend" or "caught up on laundry." You don't need ot announce you discovered your husband has been having an affair with your sister.![]()
OP: An icebreaker I can handle but my issue is feeling forced to respond in our weekly meetings! Furthermore the sense I get is the responses should be cheery or exciting. No one wants to be the person who says, “I did laundry.” And since folks get asked specifically there’s no way to opt out if you’re not on the best mental space.
Anonymous wrote:I am the manager in this situation and I hate it too. What would you prefer instead as an ice breaker? My team actively asks for icebreakers and something like a happy hour for like 5 min after our meetings. I saw an increase in work interactions too once my team started getting to know each other. I only do this once a week. How can it be more painful? I'd say that 3/4 the team LOVES these and 1/4 seems pained by it.
You can just make something up or mention the weather every week. One of my employees talks about recipes they're making nonstop. Everyone likes hearing about it.
Anonymous wrote:Just say something like "enjoyed the nice weather this weekend" or "caught up on laundry." You don't need ot announce you discovered your husband has been having an affair with your sister.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I work for a Fortune 100 company and have been in internal virtual meetings large and small where the host asks participants to share an update about their lives, i.e what did you do over the weekend, what’s new in your life, what’s your favorite thing about fall, does anyone have something to share, etc. Whether or not someone volunteers to share first, everyone must answer because they’ll be called out. “Larla, what’s going on with you?” Would anyone find this annoying or AITA? It feels so deeply forced and there’s no way for someone to remain silent if they’re managing personal issues or just don’t want to share.
That sounds like pretty standard small talk to open a meeting. It sounds like YOU feel pressured to participate, but I don't know that everyone feels that way. How are you/how's your day/how was your weekend/got any plans are pretty standard avenues of communication between adults who know each other.
You don't have to disclose personal issues. You can just saying you like the cooler weather or you had a good weekend. You are not TA here, but you definitely seem overly sensitive about a normal meeting opener.
Anonymous wrote:I work for a Fortune 100 company and have been in internal virtual meetings large and small where the host asks participants to share an update about their lives, i.e what did you do over the weekend, what’s new in your life, what’s your favorite thing about fall, does anyone have something to share, etc. Whether or not someone volunteers to share first, everyone must answer because they’ll be called out. “Larla, what’s going on with you?” Would anyone find this annoying or AITA? It feels so deeply forced and there’s no way for someone to remain silent if they’re managing personal issues or just don’t want to share.