Anger Transference by Richard Sargent 1954

And then that cat poops in everyone’s shoes.

This feels like it’s straight out of the 1960s. And it’s ending with this generation.

Jade said:
This feels like it’s straight out of the 1960s. And it’s ending with this generation.

I see much less yelling at work in my late thirties compared to my early twenties. That type of behavior isn’t acceptable anymore.

Jade said:
This feels like it’s straight out of the 1960s. And it’s ending with this generation.

Yep. As an older millennial, I’m working my way up in management. I teach my kids we don’t yell at others when we’re angry (we mess up sometimes and apologize when we do). It’s all about respect in how we talk to others, and that attitude carries over into work life. Turns out treating people with respect and dignity can motivate teams and boost their mental health and productivity.

Jade said:
This feels like it’s straight out of the 1960s. And it’s ending with this generation.

WOW NO. That’s not true.

Boomers explained in just a few frames.

The lesson here is that your boss is not your friend.

You don’t owe them anything, don’t let them treat you badly.

If you’re not in a union, join one. If you can’t find one, create one.

Payne said:
The lesson here is that your boss is not your friend.

You don’t owe them anything, don’t let them treat you badly.

If you’re not in a union, join one. If you can’t find one, create one.

We don’t fully know what happened. Maybe he deserved it and is just taking his failures out on his wife. She could be scared and then takes it out on their son. He could be the root problem here.

Sad because I’ve seen how this truly plays out in life. Which is also why I hate yelling at people.

They all deserved what they got.

That’s probably why the wife annoyed the boss; it’s a complete loop.