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Vivienne had seven years at the company and an eighteen-month promise of a VP promotion. When her supervisor offered her a "special project" — a confidential vendor payment transition initiative — she took it. Seven invoices. $2.3 million routed through a vendor that didn't exist. A fake service delivery confirmation system built by a former IT contractor. Her supervisor on approved personal leave forty-eight hours before the audit that would expose everything. Her name on all of it. In this episode of Workplace Entanglement, Vivienne tells the story of the mechanism built around her — and what she's doing about it.

She read the compensation section. She read the non-compete. She did not read the section titled "Prior Incidents and Organizational Knowledge." Two years later, a colleague said something that made her go home and read all four pages — and understand why certain conversations at that company had never quite been possible. This episode of Workplace Entanglement covers NDA scope concealment: how non-disclosure agreements are structured to contain patterns of workplace behavior while remaining legally unimpeachable, what the 'quiet list' is, and the architecture of a document that requires your voluntary signature to function as intended. Workplace Entanglement — available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and everywhere you listen.

She built a 47-slide strategy deck. Her mentor presented it to a C-suite client under his name alone. When she found a file creation timestamp proving she'd started work 11 days before he claimed to have briefed her, she consulted a lawyer — who told her it was a professional norms problem, not a legal case. In consulting, the work-for-hire clause covers everything. This episode of Workplace Entanglement breaks down how mentor credit theft works — the fragmented briefings, the deniable conversations, and the timestamp that nobody was ever asked to read. New episodes on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.

She received her annual performance review in a meeting where her manager described each criticism as the product of a year of careful observation. When she downloaded her copy, the document metadata showed a creation date eleven days before the meeting. This episode examines what a predetermined performance review reveals about corporate power, why HR is not the first move in this situation, the cognitive cost of building a case while maintaining professional performance, and what it means to stay in a company that demonstrated it will do this. Workplace Entanglement — new episodes every week.

She had access to his calendar, his files, his contacts — everything. That was the job. The price of access was not noticing certain things. For six weeks, a recurring breakfast meeting appeared on his calendar with no attendees, no agenda, and no conference room she had confirmed being used. The actual meeting was happening six blocks away at a restaurant, with HR and an advisory partner, at seven in the morning, off her desk entirely. This episode of Workplace Entanglement follows an executive assistant piecing together, through the very access she was trusted with, the plan to end her role — and sitting with the specific tiredness of noticing everything in a job where noticing is the whole point. Workplace Entanglement is available wherever you listen to podcasts.

She called it mentorship. She gave me a seat at the coffee table but locked me out of the boardroom. She put my name in the footnotes and her name in the header. This is the story of what really happens when the most powerful woman in the room decides you are her competition — not her colleague. This episode of Workplace Entanglement explores Queen Bee Syndrome inside a Los Angeles fashion e-commerce company — where a Junior Buyer discovers her Senior VP has been rerouting her best work, blocking her Board access, and quietly erasing ambitious women from the inside of their own careers for over a decade. If you have ever worked under a female boss who felt threatened by your talent, stayed silent to protect your job, or realized too late that what looked like opportunity was actually a trap — this story is for you.

When I reported my director for harassment, I thought HR would protect me. I was wrong. This is the true story of how a "holistic review" turned into a surgical strike on my career. From missing emails to social media surveillance, this is what happens when you challenge the corporate legal shield.

What happens when your boss relies on you for more than just your job? This is the true story of a Project Manager who became a "Work Wife," managing a marriage that wasn't hers until she hit her breaking point. In this episode of THE TRIALS OF WOMAN, we explore the subtle, draining reality of blurred professional boundaries in the corporate world. From grocery shopping for a supervisor at 9:00 PM to acting as an alibi for his wife, this first-person narrative dives deep into the "Work Wife" phenomenon and the high cost of emotional labor in healthcare administration. This story isn't just about a bad boss; it's about the trap of being "indispensable" and the difficult journey of reclaiming professional authority through boundary setting. If you’ve ever felt like your job description was expanding to include your boss’s personal life, this story is for you.

You’re the engine that keeps the company running—so why aren’t you in the cockpit? In this episode of THE TRIALS OF WOMAN, we expose "The Mid-Level Trap" and the secret metric high-level executives use to keep you stuck. After 15 years in finance, Sarah discovered the "L-Factor": a secret spreadsheet ranking loyalty over competence. This is a factual, first-person narrative about strategic sabotage by a mentor and the moment a load-bearer decides to stop holding up someone else’s roof.

She filed a formal sexual harassment complaint with dates, documentation, and named witnesses. Eleven minutes later, HR initiated a mutual review process — and her own employment file became part of the investigation. This episode of Workplace Entanglement tracks the architecture of the mutual investigation mechanism: how the internal complaint process can convert the act of reporting into a liability event for the person who files, how witnesses get used to characterize the complainant's behavior, and how a compliance gap discovered mid-investigation becomes a documented warning in the complainant's file. First-person. Precise. A corporate thriller grounded in documented patterns. Workplace Entanglement — new episodes weekly.