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Turns Out Having A Whinge At Work Is Actually Good For You

Permission to vent

Between unrecognised overtime and the office fridge raider, the workplace has a funny way of bringing out the closet-complainer in all of us.

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But now thereโ€™s no reason to get the post-gripe guilts. According to new research, itโ€™s actually really good for you. 

University of Melbourne researcher Dr Vanessa Pouthier studied a team of nurses and health professionals at a hospital in the US over a period of 12 months.

Her findings? When used in a certain way, both joking and whinging can help build inter-staff relationships and even improve your mood.

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 โ€œGenerally, people donโ€™t think thereโ€™s any value to it or they think it has no place in the workplace,โ€ she told ABC Radio Perth. 

โ€œIt helps people to process stress and frustration and you notice palpable changes when team members engaged in both activities.โ€

In fact, Dr Pouthier found this area so under-researched, she looked into other fields (like linguistics) to better understand how this works. She realised that venting actually acts as a bonding activity that not only helps employees to sift through any feelings of negativity, but also energises them too.

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โ€œIt allows people to recognise how similar they are in the challenges theyโ€™re facing every day and how they feel about them,โ€ she explained. โ€œOne of the best things in the team I observed, was that these griping rituals helped doctors and nurses realised they were feeling the same way about situations and they werenโ€™t that different.โ€

โ€œBy engaging in those little rituals in their care planning meetings they processed some of that negative energy and left feeling more energised.โ€

That said, it can quickly turn toxic unless you abide by a few simple rules:

โ€œYou can only gripe about people that are not in the room and you need to externalise the gripe. So, the gripeโ€™s target needs to be something everyone can agree on, like the structure in which the team is working, or difficult practitioners working in other services. Never individuals in the team.โ€

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On the other hand, Dr Pouthier says joking can help โ€œturn a problematic situation into a source of humour.โ€

โ€œComing together to joke about problems can help teams work through them and generate positive emotions in the process. This is important not only for bonding, but also from a cognitive perspective, positive emotions help keep you more open-minded.โ€  

This article originally appeared on Womenโ€™s Health.

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