If your job feels heavy, draining, or quietly soul-crushing, you’re not being melodramatic. You’re paying attention.
Yes, work can be stressful. Deadlines are real. Pressure happens.
But there’s a difference between a rough patch and workplace toxicity — and once you’re in it, your body usually knows long before you’re willing to accept it.
If you’ve caught yourself Googling “Is my workplace toxic?” at 2 am, that’s not overthinking. That’s your body calling it what it is.
This post breaks down what actually makes a workplace toxic, the most common behaviors, real examples and what to do — without pretending you can mindset your way out of a toxic job. (I tried. Failed.)
Sister, you’re not alone. I’ve been there too.
Table of Contents
What Is a Toxic Workplace?
A toxic workplace isn’t one bad boss, one tense meeting, or one bumpy quarter. It’s an environment where ‘shitshow’ is baked into the day-to-day.
Toxicity in the workplace is born when fear, control, and burnout become normal — and questioning them becomes risky. Boundaries are treated like attitude. Speaking honestly feels like walking papers. Accountability only flows downhill.
Over time, you start questioning yourself — not because you’re incapable, but because the goalposts keep moving.
If you’re in midlife and suddenly realizing you’re done tolerating a toxic job, that’s not random. It’s often part of a bigger internal shift — one I talk about in Midlife Magic Manifesto: Why Your Next Chapter Is Your Most Rebellious Yet, where we unpack why this stage of life makes BS impossible to ignore.
10 Signs of a Toxic Workplace
These signs are obvious once you stop explaining them away.
- The stress never really lets up — even after time off.
- Management communicates through pressure, silence, passive aggression, or gaslighting.
- Speaking up feels dicey.
- Expectations shift without warning.
- Mistakes are punished instead of used as a learning opportunity.
- There’s no trust among coworkers or management.
- Bosses treat employees with contempt.
- There’s zero room for growth.
- Employee turnover is high.
- Boundaries around work are nonexistent.
One of the clearest signs of workplace toxicity is how you feel before the day even begins.
If you’re exhausted before you log in, bracing yourself before meetings, or emotionally wiped out on the regular, that’s not a motivation problem — it’s an environment problem.
You don’t need every sign for your job to be toxic. A few that show up consistently are enough.
I know that now.
I’d heard stories about toxic workplaces.
My last job was one.
Looking back, it was toxic right out of the gate — I just didn’t see it yet.
- I worked 9-hour shifts with no breaks.
- I worked OT on weekends — covering three departments.
- Disorganization and chaos were the norm.
- Communication? Nonexistent.
The turning point came when new management was brought in.
Shit hit the fan for me shortly after.
- Turnover skyrocketed — some new employees didn’t make it a week, and the senior employees were getting the hell out.
- Different people were told different things — nobody knew what the fuck they were supposed to be doing.
- Instead of hiring more people, employees were expected to work all hours.
- Customers were cancelling services because of how management treated them.
I was stressed, frustrated, pissed off, and done.
I’m not built to sit down and shut up — especially when I’m being treated poorly.
Yup, that eventually got me laid off.
Good thing I was already planning what came next.
No regrets.
If you’re in it right now, I’ve got your back.

Is My Workplace Toxic?
If you’re asking this, you’re already past “just a shit week.”
People don’t casually think, “Is my workplace toxic?” when things are good. That question shows up when something has been off for a while, and you’ve been trying to explain it away.
Answer these honestly — not how you wish things were, but how they actually are:
- Do I feel respected here, or just tolerated when I’m useful?
- Am I allowed to have boundaries without being labeled “difficult”?
- Do mistakes lead to learning, or to blame and punishment?
- Have I started doubting skills I know I have?
- Do I spend more energy managing personalities and politics than doing my actual job?
- Am I exhausted before the workday even starts?
If you’re answering “yes” to more than one of these, you’re not making shit up. That’s not you being sensitive. That’s workplace toxicity doing exactly what it does best — making you doubt yourself while the environment stays the same.
If this hit a little too close to home, you don’t have to figure this out alone.
I talk about this stuff — work, confidence, midlife pivots — without the toxic positivity or corporate BS.
You can subscribe here if you want the real version in your inbox.
Let’s break down what a toxic job actually looks like.
Toxic Workplace Behaviors
Toxicity doesn’t announce itself. It shows up through repeated behavior.
These behaviors include bosses who take credit but not responsibility, feedback that feels more like public shaming than constructive criticism, and cultures where loyalty is rewarded more than competence. Rules change without warning. Silence becomes a scolding. You start changing yourself just to stay out of the crosshairs.
Over time, these behaviors don’t just affect your job performance — they affect how you see yourself.
Examples of Toxic Workplace Culture
Here are actual, solid examples of toxic workplace culture:
- Employees who answer emails late at night or skip vacations are praised, while anyone who protects their time is quietly sidelined.
- Employees do more than their job description — and get zero appreciation in return.
- A manager regularly rewrites work without explanation, then chews out the employee for “screwing up.”
- Meetings where one person, or often the boss, dominates, interrupts, or dismisses others.
- Mistakes are never forgotten, while wins are dismissed by the next day.
- Policies exist on paper, but only certain people are held to them.
- Exit interviews don’t happen, and the same issues are repeated again and again — with zero change.
These toxic workplace behaviors rarely explode all at once. They wear you down slowly, which is why so many smart, capable women stay in toxic jobs far longer than they ever thought they would.
If any of this sounds familiar, trust yourself.
What’s the most toxic behavior you’ve seen at work?
If you’re comfortable sharing, drop it in the comments — you’re not the only one dealing with this.
When Your Workplace Is Toxic
Staying in a toxic workplace changes you — for better or worse.
Over time, workplace toxicity normalizes anxiety, amplifies stress, spills over into your health and relationships, and makes self-doubt a thing. You stop trusting your gut because you’ve had to override it just to get through the day.
You might tell yourself it’s not that bad — but your stress tells another story.
What to Do When Your Workplace Is Toxic
You don’t have to quit tomorrow — but you do need to get clear and come up with a plan.
Reclaim your sense of self outside the job, set quiet boundaries where you can, and start tracking patterns so you stop gaslighting yourself.
And if you’re like me, you’re already planning your escape.
If the question “Do I need to get out of here?” keeps surfacing, Midlife Career Change: Your No-BS Guide to Starting Over (and Kicking Ass) walks you through how to think about change without blowing up your life.
Pair that with this Free Self-Interview for Midlife Career Change Clarity to sort out what you actually want — not just what you’re trying to escape.
Rising Above a Toxic Workplace
Rising above doesn’t mean pretending it didn’t sting.
It means reclaiming your voice, rebuilding trust in yourself, and choosing environments that don’t require self-abandonment. If you’ve lost touch with what actually matters to you after years of pushing through, Free Your Inner Voice and Start Living Your Core Values in Midlife helps you reconnect with the values you buried just to survive.
From there, The Rebel’s Blueprint: Know Your Worth – Strengths and Values Workbook helps you rebuild from self-respect instead of burnout.
Still Not Sure If Your Workplace Is Toxic?
If you’re still second-guessing yourself or wondering whether you’re overreacting, stop spinning and get some clarity.
Use the Toxic Workplace Checklist to quickly spot patterns, behaviors, and red flags — without gaslighting yourself or minimizing what’s actually happening.
You don’t need to label your job “toxic” to justify how bad it feels.
You just need to trust what you’re already seeing.








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