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Post by Lone Wanderer on Jan 30, 2018 8:09:14 GMT
Source: Flourishing under an abusive boss? You may be a psychopath, study showsSummary: According to new research certain types of 'psychopaths' actually benefit and flourish under abusive bosses. When you hear the term "psychopath," you probably picture Charles Manson or Jeffrey Dahmer. Psychologists, however, define it as a personality trait, and we all fall somewhere along a scale from low to high levels of psychopathy. Primary psychopaths benefit under abusive supervisors. Relative to their peers low in primary psychopathy, they felt less anger and more engagement and positive emotions under abusive supervisors.
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Feb 7, 2018 0:09:58 GMT
Most of peoples are psychopaths, so what? Psychopaths do some thing wrong. Who don't?
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Post by Elizabeth on Feb 7, 2018 0:18:22 GMT
Not me. I tend to leave a job for the tiniest things I dislike. One job said you'd be doing around a certain time but it could even be 1 to 1.5 hours later. That did not work for me. I can't make plans with such a schedule Shrug
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Feb 8, 2018 18:53:07 GMT
Most of peoples are psychopaths, so what? Psychopaths do some thing wrong. Who doesn't?
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Feb 8, 2018 21:09:55 GMT
well my employer once said we have tried all ways only the strict way works for them . Ppl tend to loosen up . so perhaps thats what the data shows , personally i try to understand the most where the abusive treatment is coming from and let it go . The rarest leadership style is charismatic leadership and i was as so lucky to work for under her for 8 months . i know for sure i would never find a boss like her having freelanced a lot .. she was a gem and even admitted her mistakes right away .
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XTG
New Member
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Post by XTG on Apr 18, 2018 3:23:48 GMT
Source: Flourishing under an abusive boss? You may be a psychopath, study showsSummary: According to new research certain types of 'psychopaths' actually benefit and flourish under abusive bosses. When you hear the term "psychopath," you probably picture Charles Manson or Jeffrey Dahmer. Psychologists, however, define it as a personality trait, and we all fall somewhere along a scale from low to high levels of psychopathy. Primary psychopaths benefit under abusive supervisors. Relative to their peers low in primary psychopathy, they felt less anger and more engagement and positive emotions under abusive supervisors.
Can you provide the link to this study? Some institutions take it very seriously. I rank 38/40 on the PCL-R 1, and so far 3 branches of the military wont accept me solely because of that. Also they criticized me for not committing to the county's suggested medicated treatment programs, even though their is no effective treatments for the disorder, or whatever you want to call it.
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