’The Person and the Position’ explores the complex and often invisible struggles that professionals face when their work roles no longer align with their true selves. Opening with a philosophical framing of identity and role, the book examines how job titles and responsibilities can become confining constructs that silently erode authenticity and well-being. It reveals the mechanisms by which organizations and individuals weaponize responsibility, creating invisible chains that bind employees to outdated or mismatched positions. The narrative unfolds without villains or heroes; instead, it maps the landscape of silence, fear, and self-deception that sustains these tensions. Readers are invited to critically examine their own acquiescence and the psychological survival tactics they adopt to endure roles that diminish their essence. Through analytical yet unsentimental prose, the book delves into themes of self- alienation, the cost of conformity, and the paradox of responsibility as both burden and potential liberation. It highlights the emotional and cognitive dissonance experienced when identity and role diverge, and how this dissonance manifests in quiet conflicts and internal compromises. The work culminates in a sober reflection on the choices available to professionals: to continue in compromised roles, to renegotiate responsibilities, or to relinquish positions in pursuit of authenticity and genuine responsibility. Throughout, questions linger, challenging readers to confront discomfort and embrace clarity rather than offering easy answers. ’The Person and the Position’ becomes a mirror reflecting the silent compromises made in professional life, and an invitation to redefine one’s relationship with work and self in profound ways.
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