The Crab Bucket

When you start growing at work — landing clients, announcing a leap, simply working harder — some colleagues don't cheer. They go quiet, they patronize, they pull. This episode names that dynamic, explains the psychology behind it, and gives you three clean lines to keep your momentum intact.

The Crab Bucket
0:004:59
You know that moment when you announce something good at work — a new direction, a business you've been building on the side, a decision to finally start leaving at 5pm — and instead of congratulations, you get a chill?
Not hostility. Not open conflict. Just a subtle withdrawal from the exact people who used to call you indispensable. That's the crab bucket in action. This episode names it, breaks down why it happens, and hands you three clean lines to keep moving without getting pulled back in.
The psychology here is worth understanding. When you grow, you inadvertently hold up a mirror to people who've been telling themselves a story — that they'd do something bigger if the timing were right, if the conditions were perfect. You didn't judge them. But their ego felt judged anyway. And that's where the cold shoulder, the patronizing comment, and the slow drip of doubt come from.
Importantly: the same people who go quiet inside the building are often not the same people cheering for you outside it. That asymmetry is data. Use it.

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