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Protecting Your Peace in Corporate - Corporate Curly
Mental Health

Protecting Your Peace in Corporate

Setting boundaries without burning down your career. Recognizing when something is a you-problem versus a them-problem.

4 Guides · 1 Boundary Audit
I.

Essential Guides

Practical frameworks for protecting your mental health without sabotaging your professional reputation.

Guide 1

Setting Boundaries That Stick

How to say no without apology, protect your time, and establish limits that don't require constant re-negotiation.

  • Start with small boundaries to build credibility
  • Use "I don't" instead of "I can't" (stronger ownership)
  • Offer alternatives when saying no to show you're solution-oriented
  • Don't explain excessively, brief and clear beats defensive
  • Enforce consistently, exceptions become expectations
Guide 2

You-Problem vs. Them-Problem

Identifying when you need to adjust versus when the environment is genuinely toxic and requires action or exit.

  • It's a you-problem if: feedback is consistent across managers, peers confirm blind spots, similar issues follow you
  • It's a them-problem if: expectations shift constantly, you're held to different standards, gaslighting is present
  • Mixed signals: get a third-party perspective (therapist, mentor, trusted colleague)
  • Track patterns over 3-6 months, isolated incidents don't define culture
  • When in doubt, work on you-problems while job searching
Guide 3

Protecting Your Time

Calendar management, meeting hygiene, and defending your deep work hours without looking unavailable or difficult.

  • Block focus time on your calendar and mark it busy
  • Decline meetings without agendas or clear outcomes
  • Batch similar tasks (emails, calls) to minimize context switching
  • Set expectations for response times and stick to them
  • Use "I have a conflict" without elaborating, no one needs details
Guide 4

When It's Time to Leave

Recognizing burnout, knowing when you've outgrown a role, and making the exit decision strategically instead of reactively.

  • Physical signs: sleep issues, Sunday scaries, constant fatigue
  • Emotional signs: dreading work, cynicism, detachment
  • Career signs: no growth path, skills atrophying, values misalignment
  • Don't leave angry, leave prepared (financial runway, next role lined up)
  • Exit gracefully even if they don't deserve it, protect your reputation
II.

Mental Health Resources

Professional support when self-care isn't enough. These resources are confidential, accessible, and designed for what you're experiencing.

Immediate Help

Crisis Support

24/7 confidential support when you need it most.

Professional Care

Therapy & Counseling

Affordable mental health care from licensed therapists.

Culturally Competent

For Black Women

Therapists who understand the unique stressors you face.

Legal Protections

Workplace Rights

Mental health conditions qualify for accommodations under the ADA.

Daily Tools

Self-Care Apps

Evidence-based tools for stress management and tracking.

Further Reading

Essential Books

On boundaries, burnout, and protecting your mental health.

Note: If your employer offers an Employee Assistance Program (EAP), you typically get 3-8 free therapy sessions per year. Check your benefits portal or ask HR confidentially.

The Boundary Audit

An honest assessment of where your boundaries are weak and what's costing you peace. Check the boxes that apply to your current situation.

Time Boundaries

  • I regularly work past my stated end time without compensation or recognition
  • I respond to emails and Slacks outside work hours because I feel guilty if I don't
  • I skip lunch or breaks to stay on top of work
  • I say yes to meetings even when my calendar is full
  • I don't block time for focused work because someone might need me

Emotional Boundaries

  • I absorb other people's stress and carry it home with me
  • I feel responsible for my manager's emotions or team morale
  • I stay silent when something crosses a line because I don't want conflict
  • I perform emotional labor that's not part of my job description
  • I feel guilty when I prioritize my needs over the team's

Workload Boundaries

  • I take on work outside my role because no one else will do it
  • I agree to unrealistic deadlines to avoid pushback
  • I pick up slack for underperforming colleagues without acknowledgment
  • I'm the default person for urgent requests even when others could do it
  • I never delegate because it's faster to do it myself

Respect Boundaries

  • People interrupt me in meetings or talk over me regularly
  • My ideas get absorbed without credit
  • I'm asked to explain my qualifications or decisions more than my peers
  • I'm the only one expected to take notes, order lunch, or do admin tasks
  • Comments about my appearance, background, or identity are normalized

Protect Your Peace Without Apology

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