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Why ‘bringing your whole self to work’ is a trap, especially for women

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For the past decade, “Bring your whole self to work” has been heralded as a marker of organizational progress. A shorthand for inclusion, psychological safety and modern leadership, the message is seductive: you no longer need to edit yourself to succeed.

But for many, that promise doesn’t match reality. In practice, “whole self” culture often asks people to take personal risks within systems that haven’t changed to accommodate them, with no established boundaries or expectations regarding what “whole self” actually means. The language may have evolved, but the meaning remains ambiguous, open to individual interpretation and subject to systemic power dynamics.

The result is a contradiction that runs through many modern workplaces; authenticity is celebrated rhetorically, but conformity is still rewarded behaviorally.

Authenticity isn’t neutral

Work has never been a neutral space. Ideas about professionalism, credibility, and leadership are shaped by long-standing norms and expectations, many of which are masculine, white and middle-class. Often unconscious, these norms influence who is listened to, trusted and promoted.

McKinsey and LeanIn’s Women in the Workplace 2025 report shows how women continue to face structural disadvantages that significantly limit career progression. Now, only 50% of companies say women’s advancement is a high priority, and women continue to receive less career support and fewer opportunities to progress than men at key stages.

Representation declines at every step of the corporate pipeline—from roughly half of entry-level roles to less than a third of C-suite positions—driven in part by the persistent “broken rung,” where fewer women, and significantly fewer women of color, are promoted into their first management roles.

In this context, women are navigating heightened scrutiny and a reduced margin for error long before senior leadership positions are even on the table. Calls to “bring your whole self to work” ring hollow in environments that remain structurally unequal.

For those already close to the dominant norm, authenticity is relatively low risk. For others, it can mean increased scrutiny, social penalties, or stalled progression in systems already weighted against them.

The cost of visibility

In my work as a voice and visibility consultant and while researching my book Beyond Palatable, I repeatedly observed this pattern. Women who spoke directly were labelled abrasive. Women who showed emotion were seen as unprofessional. Women who challenged cultural norms were marked as “difficult,” “not quite leadership material,” or “not the right fit.”

Many of the most painful stories involved other women making the call that actively suppressed career progression, either because they believed there was only a certain amount of space for “people like me” at the table or because they had been conditioned to behave in a more cutthroat way to get ahead.

This is the reality behind much “whole self” rhetoric. What it often requires is not authenticity in its truest sense, but selective disclosure; sharing only the parts of yourself that feel acceptable, familiar and non-threatening. Or changing yourself entirely to fit the expectations of those in charge of your progression. That is career safety, and for many, the alternative is a luxury they cannot afford.

Psychological safety can’t be performative

The problem isn’t authenticity itself. It’s the assumption that individuals should take the risk of being fully visible before organizations have done the structural work to make it safe to do so.

The U.K. Government’s 2024 Inclusion at Work panel report clearly highlights this gap. It emphasises that inclusion cannot rely solely on individual confidence or resilience alone. Without consistent leadership accountability, fair progression systems and protection from bias, inclusion efforts risk becoming symbolic rather than substantive.

In other words, telling people to “be themselves” without changing how performance is assessed, how promotion decisions are made, or how dissent is handled simply shifts responsibility downward. The risk sits with the employee, not the institution.

Unfiltered self-expression can also impact leadership effectiveness, with several researchers arguing that “bringing your whole self to work” can lead to oversharing and unstable dynamics—thus damaging leadership effectiveness, eroding trust, and sabotaging judgement when it veers into unprofessionalism or, conversely, into too much emotional transparency.

That evolution reflects a growing recognition that authenticity is not inherently virtuous, and that unfiltered self-expression is not the same thing as ethical or effective leadership.

The double bind for women

For women and people from the global majority, the stakes are higher because the expectations are narrower and more contradictory.

McKinsey and LeanIn’s 2025 update shows that women are still expected to demonstrate warmth and likability alongside competence, while men are more often evaluated primarily on results. Deviating from expectations by being overly direct, overly ambitious, or overly visible can elicit backlash. Especially when the boundaries are unclear.

For many women, “whole self” culture becomes another layer of emotional labor. They are asked to be open, values-driven, and human, while simultaneously managing how that openness will be perceived.

How to navigate authenticity at work, without burning out or crossing boundaries

For employers

Stop asking for “whole selves” and start designing safer systems. Psychological safety is not created by slogans but by consistent behaviour. Audit how performance is evaluated, who receives support and championship, and whose mistakes are accepted.

Make expectations around professionalism, feedback and emotional expression explicit rather than assumed. Train leaders to handle disagreement, emotion and difference without penalizing those who don’t fit a narrow norm. Most importantly, model boundaries. When leaders overshare or blur boundaries, it creates unclear expectations for others.

For employees

Authenticity should be intentional, not compulsory. You are allowed to choose what you share, when, and with whom. Professional boundaries are not a failure of integrity; they are a form of self-protection.

Pay attention to what is rewarded in your organization, not just what is said. Build alliances before visibility, and seek feedback from individuals with both institutional power and trust. Your safety and energetic sustainability matter more than performing openness.

For organizations

The goal is not radical transparency. It’s fair systems, clear boundaries, and cultures in which difference doesn’t carry disproportionate risk.

Workplaces are not therapeutic spaces, and expecting them to function that way places unreasonable demands on colleagues and leaders alike.

Authenticity, without structure, creates further inequities. Without boundaries, it creates risk.

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