Are they going to fix the HVAC issues or are we going to continue to suffer until the site closes? It should never be above 80 degrees or below 65 degrees in the office. What a horrible work environment!
Posts mentioning hashtag #hostileenvironment
Below are all the posts — topics as well as replies — that mention the hashtag #hostileenvironment.
Mention #hostileenvironment in your post to continue the discussion!
“what goes around comes around”
I’ve been checking this site occasionally because for me it's where I catchup on office politics. I laughed with the sarcasm and got upset with the pain some have been tolerating. I’ve never posted before, but seeing how many people tolerate hostility and harassment made me want to share my own experience.
I had serious family issues and needed some time off. Instead of supporting me, my manager started insulting me, saying women “aren’t made for the workforce” and that he needed “strong people.” He even went around telling others what was happening in my personal life and told the program’s project manager not to count on me. Then he dropped my ranking. I was humiliated and heartbroken.
About a year later, I heard his wife filed for divorce and he was dealing with a nasty situation of his own. Life has a way of circling back.
Sick days
PSA to all the olds who must come in and cough and sneeze in our faces. I know yinz gotta make your days but take a sick day like wtf. Can’t go more than 2 minutes without one of you hacking a lung. Die quieter, thank you for your time
Chevron Culture 2026
I am not the OP but I agree, this needs to stay on top. The original is posted multiple times below. With nearly 15,000 views, it is definitely resonating with personnel. You don't have to be in HSE to know exactly what this poster is talking about.
I have worked for three companies before this one. Each had its flaws, but each, in its own way, understood something basic about decency. When I came to CVX, my fourth, I was told, again and again, that the culture was different. Healthier. Kinder. A place where people stayed because they were valued.
I believed it. For a long time, I wanted to.
Six years in, I can say without hesitation that this is the most hostile environment I have ever survived and I started on a rig in Midland, TX.
What makes it dangerous isn’t incompetence or chaos, it’s intention. Everything here is calculated. Smiles are worn like disguises. Praise is given only when it can be reclaimed later as leverage. If your work is good, someone else will quietly attach their name to it. If your ideas land too well, they stop being yours almost immediately.
And if you are noticed, truly noticed, by the wrong person, especially your boss, the consequences are swift and surgical. Threats are not confronted; they are dismantled. Slowly. Invisibly. By the time you realize what’s happening, your reputation has already been rewritten without you in the room.
Gossip is the real currency here. Cruelty, its favorite language. Personal lives are treated as public property, mined for weaknesses. An affair. A secret. A truth shared with the wrong person. Even something small, once discovered, is inflated until it becomes unmanageable. Stories grow teeth. Context disappears. Suddenly, survival feels like something you have to apologize for.
This is not a place where mistakes are forgiven. It is a place where they are archived.
I used to think cultures were defined by mission statements and values posted on walls. Now I know better. Culture is what happens in whispers, in meetings you aren’t invited to, in credit you never receive, in silence when you need protection.
If this place has taught me anything, it’s that the most dangerous environments are the ones that insist they are safe.
Chevron Culture 2026 (I agree with the OP, this needs to stay as a top topic)
(original post is 11 down)
I have worked for three companies before this one. Each had its flaws, but each, in its own way, understood something basic about decency. When I came to CVX, my fourth, I was told, again and again, that the culture was different. Healthier. Kinder. A place where people stayed because they were valued.
I believed it. For a long time, I wanted to.
Six years in, I can say without hesitation that this is the most hostile environment I have ever survived and I started on a rig in Midland, TX.
What makes it dangerous isn’t incompetence or chaos, it’s intention. Everything here is calculated. Smiles are worn like disguises. Praise is given only when it can be reclaimed later as leverage. If your work is good, someone else will quietly attach their name to it. If your ideas land too well, they stop being yours almost immediately.
And if you are noticed, truly noticed, by the wrong person, especially your boss, the consequences are swift and surgical. Threats are not confronted; they are dismantled. Slowly. Invisibly. By the time you realize what’s happening, your reputation has already been rewritten without you in the room.
Gossip is the real currency here. Cruelty, its favorite language. Personal lives are treated as public property, mined for weaknesses. An affair. A secret. A truth shared with the wrong person. Even something small, once discovered, is inflated until it becomes unmanageable. Stories grow teeth. Context disappears. Suddenly, survival feels like something you have to apologize for.
This is not a place where mistakes are forgiven. It is a place where they are archived.
I used to think cultures were defined by mission statements and values posted on walls. Now I know better. Culture is what happens in whispers, in meetings you aren’t invited to, in credit you never receive, in silence when you need protection.
If this place has taught me anything, it’s that the most dangerous environments are the ones that insist they are safe.
Chevron Culture 2026
I have worked for three companies before this one. Each had its flaws, but each, in its own way, understood something basic about decency. When I came to CVX, my fourth, I was told, again and again, that the culture was different. Healthier. Kinder. A place where people stayed because they were valued.
I believed it. For a long time, I wanted to.
Six years in, I can say without hesitation that this is the most hostile environment I have ever survived and I started on a rig in Midland, TX.
What makes it dangerous isn’t incompetence or chaos, it’s intention. Everything here is calculated. Smiles are worn like disguises. Praise is given only when it can be reclaimed later as leverage. If your work is good, someone else will quietly attach their name to it. If your ideas land too well, they stop being yours almost immediately.
And if you are noticed, truly noticed, by the wrong person, especially your boss, the consequences are swift and surgical. Threats are not confronted; they are dismantled. Slowly. Invisibly. By the time you realize what’s happening, your reputation has already been rewritten without you in the room.
Gossip is the real currency here. Cruelty, its favorite language. Personal lives are treated as public property, mined for weaknesses. An affair. A secret. A truth shared with the wrong person. Even something small, once discovered, is inflated until it becomes unmanageable. Stories grow teeth. Context disappears. Suddenly, survival feels like something you have to apologize for.
This is not a place where mistakes are forgiven. It is a place where they are archived.
I used to think cultures were defined by mission statements and values posted on walls. Now I know better. Culture is what happens in whispers, in meetings you aren’t invited to, in credit you never receive, in silence when you need protection.
If this place has taught me anything, it’s that the most dangerous environments are the ones that insist they are safe.
Management is piling on pressure to force people out
It’s become rather clear what’s happening. The company is deliberately creating a hostile and miserable environment to pressure people into quitting on their own. Between impossible workloads and a culture of constant fear, people are breaking. If you’re feeling this pressure, know that it’s a tactic, and you’re not alone.
When you know Better Do Better.
Been with SAP 15 years. I am a women and experienced harassment my whole life, but the icing on the cake was when I experienced psychological harassment from a newly appointment manager who had no experience in management at SAP.
It was obvious to our team, he was problematic. I told my team we should report him, nobody wanted to report him.
I took matters in my own hands, confided with attorneys and played my strategy and reported him to his manager, and HR. 4 months later he was fired.
That said, I was appalled nobody would do anything including his manager until there were more complaints about him.
I had to escape like an abused woman from my incompetent manager at SAP.
I expected better from SAP.
All this to say, I hope SAP cleans up at ALL levels, because the ship is starting to crack.
Money is great Integrity is better.
For managers out there! Do better.
No one will help our club
I’m sure nothing will happen from the post. And not sure how much information I can give in this post like names and what not . But I work in a club in Louisiana. My club manager is horrible.
She is racist. Treats all the white people like sh-t and had fired bunch’s of long term associates. Many many have called ethics on her and nothing has happened. She walks around the club says this is her club and she will do what she wants
Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae - INDIANS ONLY!
If you are not Indian, forget applying.
In fact, if you already work here, you will soon be laid off.
INDIANS ONLY!
Leadership here is a mess
Leadership here is a mess. They talk like they know the work but they really don’t. Cliques run everything and block anyone who’s not in the circle. Some leaders lie straight to your face and HR backs them while they push people out. Employees are treated like tools, not people, and anyone who doesn’t fit in gets picked at until they give up. No wonder so many are quitting.