anonymous عمل confessions
Real workplace confessions: lying on resumes, hiding from managers, the project that quietly tanked.
Gallup's annual State of the Workplace report puts global employee engagement at around 23% — meaning roughly three out of four people are quietly disconnected from the job they're paid to show up for. Anonymous workplace confession sits in that gap. It's the place people admit they faked the demo, slept through the standup, or got promoted on a project they didn't actually finish.
Expect entries from every level of the hierarchy. Junior staff confess to padding hours; managers confess to performative urgency; founders confess to losing months pretending the runway was longer than it was. The ones that hit hardest are usually the boring ones: a person who's been at the same desk for fourteen years, finally writing what they wish they'd quit to do.
Reply with your own — what got cut, who got carried, what the spreadsheet didn't show. No company names, no people you can't unname. The story is the point; the audit isn't.