GO SUBSCRIBE to The Illuminating Wisdom Podcast on All Streaming Platforms!! 👉🏽 Join The Podcast Community: https://www.illuminatingwisdom.com/forms/2148272767 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbvXMghexdlMj1bk6XEyocg Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/illuminating-wisdom-lessons-on-life-livelihood-and-the-law/id1689917400 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4ca636t0DfAxagrqj13XID?si=0c5c81e6045b4110 Website: www.illuminatingwisdom.com A workplace bully rarely works alone. Even when one person is causing the harm, the room helps decide whether the behavior continues. Silence can become permission. Avoidance can become protection. And the person being targeted is often left wondering why everyone saw it, but no one named it. In this episode of Leadership, Law, and Lightwork, I look at workplace bullying through Kim Scott's Radical Respect, the bystander problem, and the complicated story behind Amy Cuddy's famous TED Talk on power posing. Cuddy used her TED2026 platform to name what almost destroyed her: a sustained bullying campaign carried out over years by named, tenured academics. The Legal Blind Spot looks at the gap between workplace bullying and legally actionable harassment, discrimination, or retaliation. Harmful conduct does not always fit neatly into a legal claim, but that does not mean it should be ignored, undocumented, or excused as style, intensity, or high standards. I also introduce two free companion resources for this episode. The Workplace Bullying Survival Guide is written first for the person who may be targeted. It includes a documentation template, common gaslighting tactics, escalation prompts, HR and legal issue-spotting questions, medical and safety considerations, and five practices from the Illuminated Wisdom Toolkit™ for what bullying does to the body. The second resource, The Workplace Bullying Response Guide, is written for witnesses, managers, leaders, and people who may recognize themselves in some of the behavior described. It helps the people around the pattern understand what they are seeing, what they may be excusing, and what they can do next. This episode is for anyone who has been targeted, witnessed something and stayed silent, leads a team where something feels off, or may need to look honestly at their own conduct. Get the Free Workplace Bullying Guides I created two free guides to go with this episode. The Workplace Bullying Survival Guide is for the person who may be targeted at work. It includes: A workplace bullying documentation template The Five Ws and How for documenting what happened Common gaslighting tactics and how to name them Escalation prompts for HR, legal, medical, and safety concerns Retaliation, confidentiality, and recording cautions Five practices from the Illuminated Wisdom Toolkit™ for what bullying does to the body The Workplace Bullying Response Guide is for witnesses, managers, leaders, and people who may recognize themselves in the behavior. It includes: A recognition guide for workplace bullying patterns Common gaslighting tactics Guidance for witnesses who saw something and stayed silent In-the-moment language using Kim Scott's Radical Respect framework Questions for leaders who suspect bullying is happening on their team A section on the high performer problem A section for people who may recognize themselves in the behavior Accountability prompts before apologizing, explaining, or defending These guides are general education. They do not provide legal, HR, medical, or mental health advice. They do not create an attorney-client, coaching, therapeutic, medical, or consulting relationship. If you are dealing with a specific situation, talk to a qualified lawyer in your jurisdiction and consult the appropriate HR, medical, mental health, or safety professional based on your facts. What You'll Learn Why workplace bullies often need silence from the people around them What Kim Scott's Radical Respect adds to the conversation about bias, prejudice, and bullying Why the Amy Cuddy power pose backlash still matters for leaders, lawyers, and teams How professional critique can cross into humiliation or harm Why witnesses freeze, and what they can do after the moment has passed How workplace bullying can appear through exclusion, work sabotage, public correction, threats, and remote communication Why bullying may be harmful without creating a clean legal claim When bullying may overlap with harassment, discrimination, retaliation, medical issues, or safety concerns Why leaders need to examine the cost of keeping certain high performers in power How documentation protects your memory, your record, and your options Legal Blind Spot Workplace bullying can be serious, health-harming, and professionally devastating. Under U.S. employment law, bullying by itself is not always unlawful. The legal analysis often turns on whether the conduct is connected to a protected category, whether it contributes to a hostile work environment under applicable law, whether the person experienced retaliation after protected activity, whether threats or safety issues are involved, whether false factual statements were made, or whether state law, contract rights, workplace policy, or other protections apply. This gap matters. A person may be harmed long before the law gives them a clean label for what happened. That is why documentation, policy review, timing, witnesses, medical impact, and legal advice can matter. This segment is general legal education and should not be taken as legal advice. It does not create an attorney-client relationship. If you are dealing with a specific situation, talk to a lawyer in your jurisdiction who can advise you based on your facts. Illuminated Wisdom Toolkit™ Take Workplace bullying does not stay in your head. Your body may react before your mind has finished processing what happened. The email arrives. The meeting invite appears. The person's name shows up on your screen. Suddenly your jaw tightens, your breathing changes, your stomach drops, or your brain starts rehearsing the conversation before it has even begun. That is why The Workplace Bullying Survival Guide includes five practices from the Illuminated Wisdom Toolkit™: The Six-Point Reset Box Breathing for the Meeting After the Meeting EFT Tapping for Workplace Bullying The Body Scan for Boundary Cost The Push-and-Release Reset These practices are designed to help you steady your body long enough to think, document, choose, and get support. They are not a substitute for medical care, mental health care, legal advice, HR guidance, or immediate safety planning. Get both free guides at https://www.illuminatingwisdom.com/bullying. Sponsored By This episode is sponsored by Illuminating Wisdom, where I help leaders, lawyers, founders, and high-achieving professionals build the capacity to lead, decide, and communicate under pressure. Subscribe at IlluminatingWisdom.com to receive my Wednesday newsletter, where I share one tool from the Illuminated Wisdom Toolkit™ each week along with reflections on leadership, law, and steadiness under pressure. Legal Blind Spot Sponsor The Legal Blind Spot segment of Leadership, Law, and Lightwork is brought to you by Legally Lucid. AI gives answers you think are correct. Templates give documents you think are complete. Peers give shortcuts that make you feel safe. Lawyers give advice if you know what to ask and have the budget. Legally Lucid helps founders and business owners know what to check before a business decision becomes an expensive mistake. For more legal blind spots, go to LegallyLucid.com to join the Friday Legal Blind Spot newsletter or to apply to be a Founding Member of Legally Lucid before the October 1 launch. Articles and Resource Links: Illuminating Wisdom: IlluminatingWisdom.com The Workplace Bullying Survival Guide and Workplace Bullying Response Guide: https://www.illuminatingwisdom.com/bullying Legally Lucid: LegallyLucid.com Kim Scott, Radical Respect: RadicalCandor.com Amy Cuddy, "Your Body Language May Shape Who You Are," TED Talk: https://www.ted.com/talks/amy_cuddy_your_body_language_may_shape_who_you_are Episode 31 of Leadership, Law, and Lightwork with Jenny Thrasher on what we get wrong about suicide: https://www.illuminatingwisdom.com/podcast-episodes-blog?p=the-language-of-support-ending-the-stigma-around-suicide Workplace Bullying Institute: WorkplaceBullying.org David Yamada, Minding the Workplace: https://newworkplace.wordpress.com/author/dcy1959/ American Bar Association, "6 Ways to Fight Workplace Bullying in Legal Spaces": https://www.americanbar.org/groups/journal/articles/2022/6-ways-to-fight-workplace-bullying-in-legal-spaces/ EEOC, Promising Practices for Preventing Harassment: https://www.eeoc.gov/promising-practices-preventing-harassment-construction-industry American Psychiatric Association, "What To Do About Workplace Bullying": https://www.psychiatry.org/news-room/apa-blogs/what-to-do-about-workplace-bullying Crisis Text Line, Bullying Resources: https://www.crisistextline.org/topics/bullying/ 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline: https://988lifeline.org