• Your New Power Phrase: "I Will Get Back To You"
    Jun 9 2026

    Your New Power Phrase: "I'll Get Back To You" (Stop Them Pressuring You Into Instant Answers. Making the other person wait is a form of using your power.)

    Stop letting your toxic boss pressure you into rushed decisions and answers you'll regret. Master the most powerful phrase in your workplace arsenal: "I'll get back to you."

    Toxic bosses thrive on catching you off-guard and demanding instant responses. When you buy yourself time, you take back control, think clearly, and avoid the traps set by rushed decisions.

    When to use it: being ambushed with demands, unrealistic deadlines, complex questions that need thought, emotional manipulation, scope creep disguised as favors, requests outside your role, and any high-pressure moment when you smell a trap.

    What you'll learn: how to use this phrase without seeming incompetent, variations for different situations, what to do with the time you've bought, how to follow up strategically, and both email and in-person versions.

    Powerful variations:

    • Standard: "I will get back to you." (more direct, less info is better.)
    • Emotional manipulation: "I need time to process. May I take some time and get back to you?"

    What to do with the time you bought: breathe and reset, analyze the real ask, check your options, consult if needed, craft your response, and follow up on time to build credibility.

    When bosses push back:

    • "I need an answer NOW." → "I can give you a considered response in 30 minutes, or you get an uninformed guess now. What is your preference?"
    • "This is a simple yes or no." → "I want to make sure I'm accurate. I can confirm for you by end of day."
    • "Why do you need time?" → "I'd like to check something and compose an accurate response for you."

    The email version: "Thanks for reaching out. I need to review [X] before responding properly. I'll get back to you by [specific day/time]."

    The timeline sweet spot: immediate pressure, buy time by telling bad boss you need 30 minutes to an hour.

    Complex requests, end of day or next morning. Major decisions, 24 to 48 hours. Always give a specific timeframe.

    Pro moves: combine with documentation ("Can you send me an email with the details?"), redirect when appropriate ("Let me check with the relevant person and get back to you"), or buy more time ("I'll have an update by [new time]").

    Why this works: it removes their pressure advantage, makes you appear thoughtful instead of reactive, prevents you from agreeing to impossible things, disrupts manipulation tactics, and reduces impulsive mistakes they can criticize later.

    Your bad boss uses manipulation tactics to motivate you to do things you wouldn't otherwise. This series is teaching you techniques so you don't become manipulated more than you want to be at your job (we all have to earn a living but life is a choice of what you will put up with.)

    Common fears and why they're wrong: "They'll think I'm slow" - no, you'll appear thoughtful. "They'll get angry" - better than agreeing to something impossible. "I'll seem incompetent" - instant bad answers seem far worse. "I'll lose opportunities" - rushed decisions lead to bigger losses.

    The power shift: when you control your response time, you control the conversation. Toxic bosses lose their ability to corner you, pressure you, or catch you off-guard.

    When did buying time save you at work? I want to hear your story.

    Need coaching on your own situation? Email me at badbossguide@gmail.com.

    Support the show: https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04

    Show More Show Less
    7 mins
  • Stop Over-Explaining to Your Toxic Boss - Start Informing Instead
    Jun 8 2026

    You're not on trial. Stop defending every decision like you need permission to exist.

    There's a critical difference between over-explaining and informing. One signals insecurity and hands a toxic boss ammunition. The other projects competence and shuts the door on scrutiny. This episode breaks down the shift and shows you exactly how to make it.

    When you over-explain, every extra word becomes an opening - a reason to question your judgment, pick apart your logic, or invent a problem that didn't exist. Informing flips that. You state what's happening, give a brief why if it's needed, and move forward.

    Signs you're over-explaining:

    • Justifying routine decisions
    • Apologizing for normal work processes
    • Volunteering excessive detail nobody asked for
    • Defending yourself before anyone objects
    • Long emails when two lines would do

    In this episode:

    • The psychology behind why we over-explain at work
    • How to shift from explaining to informing
    • Confident phrases that hold their ground
    • When explanation actually IS appropriate
    • Email strategies for chronic over-explainers
    • How to handle the guilt of being brief
    • What to say when a boss demands more

    Over-explaining vs. informing, side by side:

    OVER-EXPLAINING: "I'm so sorry, but I can't stay late tonight because I have a doctor's appointment I scheduled weeks ago and it's really important and I tried to reschedule..." INFORMING: "I have an appointment at 5pm, so I'll be leaving on time."

    OVER-EXPLAINING: "I decided to approach it this way because I thought about the other options and they seemed problematic for these seven reasons..." INFORMING: "I approached it this way because it's most efficient for our timeline."

    The framework is simple: state what, state why (briefly), move forward. No apologies for existing. No anticipating objections. No inviting scrutiny.

    Here's why it works. Toxic bosses respect confidence more than compliance. Inform instead of explain and you project competence, cut off opportunities for criticism, set professional boundaries, and control the narrative.

    You'll feel rude at first. But it's not. Being brief isn't rude - it's professional. If they need more, they'll ask.

    ☕ Support the show: https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04

    📬 Need one-on-one help with a bad boss? Reach me at badbossguide@gmail.com

    ❤️ Get more on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman

    👉 SUBSCRIBE for more communication strategies that shift power dynamics at work.

    💬 Do you do this? How did you break the habit? Let others know in the comments below.

    State. Inform. Move on.

    #OverExplaining #ToxicBoss #CommunicationSkills #AssertiveCommunication #ToxicWorkplace #ProfessionalCommunication #CareerAdvice #ConfidentCommunication #WorkplaceBoundaries #ToxicManager #ProfessionalDevelopment #EmailEtiquette #WorkplaceStrategy #CareerTips #SelfConfidence

    Show More Show Less
    7 mins
  • Set Boundaries Against Your Boss That Actually Work
    Jun 3 2026

    You've heard about boundaries. You tried to set them before but your bad boss or other people ignore them. You are at your wit's end and you feel like giving up. Your boss keeps crossing the line. And every time you try to hold it, something goes wrong.

    Maybe you set the boundary and they ignored it. Maybe you said something and it made things worse. Maybe you are starting to wonder if boundaries even work when the person you report to has all the power.

    They do. But not the way most people try to use them.

    This episode breaks down how to set boundaries with a bad boss that actually hold - not the feel-good advice that falls apart the moment your boss pushes back, but the real mechanics of why boundaries fail at work and what to do differently.

    Here's what we cover:

    • Why most workplace boundaries collapse before they start
    • The difference between a boundary and an ultimatum
    • How to set limits without making yourself a target
    • What to do when your boss tests or ignores the line you drew
    • The internal shift that makes boundaries possible even in toxic environments

    You are not powerless here. But you do need a different approach than what you have been trying.

    This series pulls from Stoicism, Plato, Nietzsche, and modern workplace psychology to help you survive a bad boss without losing yourself in the process. Forty-five episodes. Real tools. Your sanity.

    Support the show: Donate any amount: https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04

    Patreon (early access + bonus content): https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman

    1:1 Coaching: Stuck in a job that's eating you alive? I do private coaching sessions for people navigating bad bosses, toxic workplaces, and career transitions.

    Reach out: badbossguide@gmail.com or text 407-495-1311.

    If this episode hit, leave a rating, share it with the friend who keeps texting you about their job, and follow the show so you don't miss the next one.

    Keywords: bad boss survival guide, setting boundaries with your boss, workplace boundaries, how to set boundaries at work, boundaries with toxic boss, boss ignoring boundaries, how to stand up to your boss, toxic workplace, bad boss behavior, workplace bullying, hostile work environment, managing up, narcissistic boss, workplace psychology, dealing with difficult boss, workplace mental health, boundary setting strategies, bad boss podcast, career advice, michael kuhlman, bad boss guide, workplace survival, you are not powerless at work, boundaries that stick, toxic boss survival

    Show More Show Less
    11 mins
  • How to Deal With Anger When You Have a Toxic Boss
    May 28 2026

    Feeling rage at work? You're not crazy - you're being mistreated. Learn healthy ways to process workplace anger so you don't explode or carry it home every night.

    😤 Why Toxic Workplaces Make You Angry

    Anger is a natural response to mistreatment. If you're furious at your boss, it's probably because they're violating basic standards of decent treatment. Your anger is valid - but how you handle it determines your future.

    Common Anger Triggers

    Being publicly humiliated or criticized

    Watching your boss take credit for your work

    Constant gaslighting

    Unfair treatment or favoritism

    Disrespected time and boundaries

    Being micromanaged and not trusted

    Impossible demands and blame

    Watching others get mistreated

    What You'll Learn

    ✅ Why anger at toxic bosses is healthy

    ✅ Healthy vs. destructive anger

    ✅ Immediate techniques to cool down at work

    ✅ How to process anger without getting fired

    ✅ The "rage journal" method that works

    ✅ Physical strategies to release angry energy

    ✅ When to express anger vs. contain it

    ✅ Preventing anger from turning into burnout

    ✅ Using anger as fuel for positive change

    ✅ How to stop taking work anger home

    Healthy Ways to Deal With It

    Take a strategic bathroom break to breathe

    Document what happened (turns rage into action)

    Move during lunch or breaks

    Vent to trusted friends OUTSIDE work

    Channel anger into job search motivation

    Practice the "90-second rule" for emotions

    Use anger to clarify your boundaries

    Treat anger as information about your values

    Responses to Avoid

    Confronting your boss while emotional

    Venting to coworkers (can be used against you)

    Passive-aggressive retaliation

    Sabotaging your own work out of spite

    Exploding in meetings or emails

    Turning anger inward into depression

    Numbing with substances

    Quitting without a plan

    The Anger Processing Framework

    Acknowledge: "I have a right to be angry"

    Separate: "This belongs at work, not at home"

    Channel: "How can I use this energy?"

    Release: "What do I let go of today?"

    Act: "What's one step toward change?"

    Emergency Cool-Down Techniques

    Count backward from 100 by 7s

    Clench and release fists under your desk

    Walk around the building

    Cold water on wrists and face

    When Anger Becomes a Warning Sign

    Rage that doesn't fade after work hours

    Physical symptoms (headaches, stomach issues, insomnia)

    Fantasizing about confrontations or revenge

    Feeling angry more days than not

    Anger hurting your relationships outside work

    Your Anger Is Telling You Something

    Chronic workplace anger is your body saying "this environment is harming you." Don't ignore it. Use it as data that change is needed - boundaries, coping strategies, or an exit.

    👉 SUBSCRIBE for more strategies for toxic workplace survivors!

    Pair This With

    Energy management techniques

    Grey Rock Method for reducing triggers

    Documentation practices

    Exit strategy planning

    Remember: You're not weak for feeling angry. You're human. The goal isn't to never feel anger - it's to handle it in ways that protect your career, health, and future while you find your way to something better.

    💬 What's your healthiest anger outlet? Share below - your tip might save someone else.

    #WorkplaceAnger #ToxicBoss #AngerManagement #MentalHealthAtWork #ToxicWorkplace #EmotionalWellness #WorkplaceStress #CareerAdvice #BurnoutPrevention #WorkplaceSurvival #ToxicManager #AngerManagementTips #MentalHealth #stressmanagement

    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
  • How to Disagree Without Getting Fired: Speaking Up to a Toxic Boss Safely
    May 20 2026

    You don't have to be a doormat to keep your job.

    If you have spent months swallowing your concerns, nodding along to bad decisions, and watching projects head off a cliff because nobody is allowed to say the obvious thing, this episode is for you. Constant agreement is not safety. It is slow erasure. But raw, direct pushback with a bad boss is a fast way to get labeled difficult and walked out the door.

    There is a third path. This episode walks you through it.

    We cover the art of professional disagreement. Not bootlicking. Not blowing up the room. The actual skill of pushing back in a way that protects your job, your sanity, and your integrity at the same time.

    Here's what we cover:

    • When disagreement is necessary versus when to let it go
    • The "Yes, And" technique for reframing pushback
    • How to disagree upward without sounding insubordinate
    • Timing your disagreements so they actually land
    • Language and phrasing that softens hard truths
    • When to disagree privately and when to do it on the record
    • Using questions instead of statements to plant seeds
    • The data-driven concern approach
    • A three-part framework you can use in any conversation
    • How to read your boss type and tailor your approach
    • Why you always follow a verbal disagreement with a recap email
    • What it means when none of this works

    If you find yourself rehearsing every sentence before you walk into your boss's office, you are not weak. You are trying to survive a workplace where honesty has been criminalized. These tools will help you keep speaking up without paying the full price for it.

    This episode sits inside the survival toolkit phase of the series. We have already named the patterns of a bad boss and started building the documentation habit. Now we move into the day-to-day tactical skill of managing up without losing yourself.

    This series pulls from Stoicism, Plato, Nietzsche, and modern workplace psychology to help you survive a bad boss without losing yourself in the process. Forty-five episodes. Real tools. Your sanity.

    Reality check: If you cannot disagree respectfully without fear of retaliation, you are not in a healthy workplace. Fire your boss and use these techniques while you plan your exit.

    Support the show: Donate any amount: https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04 Patreon (early access + bonus content): https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman

    1:1 Coaching: Stuck in a job that's eating you alive? I do private coaching sessions for people navigating bad bosses, toxic workplaces, and career transitions. Reach out: badbossguide@gmail.com or text 407-495-1311.

    If this episode hit, leave a rating, share it with the friend you keep texting about their job, and follow the show so you don't miss the next one.

    Keywords: how to disagree with your boss, speaking up at work, toxic boss communication, managing up, professional disagreement, bad boss survival guide, how to push back at work, dealing with difficult boss, workplace diplomacy, assertive communication, toxic workplace strategies, narcissistic boss, insecure boss, micromanaging boss, workplace communication skills, conflict resolution at work, career survival tactics, how to disagree without getting fired, workplace boundaries, advocating for yourself at work, bad boss podcast, michael kuhlman, bad boss guide, career advice, workplace mental health

    Show More Show Less
    10 mins
  • The Art of Strategic Silence
    May 12 2026

    Most people talk too much at work. Especially around a bad boss.

    Today we break down strategic silence - when to hold back, when to let a pause do the heavy lifting, and how saying less can actually give you more leverage in a toxic workplace. Silence is not weakness. Used right, it is one of the sharpest tools you have.

    If you are stuck under a bad boss, this series is built to help you survive it, outlast it, and come out stronger on the other side.

    Need one-on-one coaching? Reach out: badbossguide@gmail.com

    Support the show: https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04

    Subscribe, share with someone who needs it, and leave a review if this hit home.

    Show More Show Less
    13 mins
  • Stop Managing Time - Manage Your Energy at Your Toxic Workplace
    May 7 2026

    Time management is a lie they sold you - especially in a toxic workplace.

    You can color-code your calendar, time-block every hour, and still walk out at 5pm feeling gutted. Why? Because hours aren't the real bottleneck. Energy is. And under a bad boss, your energy is being drained by people who don't care what's left of you when you get home.

    In Day 6, we flip the script. Forget squeezing more out of the clock - learn how to protect what actually keeps you functional: your mental, emotional, and physical fuel. Because in a toxic environment, every interaction has a cost, and the people who survive are the ones who track the spend.

    What we cover:

    • Why traditional time management fails under toxic leadership
    • The four kinds of energy you have to manage - and which one bad bosses drain first
    • Practical moves to recover energy during the workday
    • How to stop letting your boss set the thermostat on your nervous system

    If you're stuck working for a bad boss and need someone in your corner, I do 1:1 coaching. Email me directly at badbossguide@gmail.com.

    Support the show:

    • Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman
    • YouTube channel members - hit the Join button below the video
    • One-time tip: https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04

    If this one hit home, drop a comment with the biggest energy drain at your job - and share the episode with someone who needs to hear it. You're not alone in this.

    Show More Show Less
    11 mins
  • Plato's Cave at Work: How Toxic Jobs Distort Your Reality
    Apr 29 2026

    Most people don't realize they're in a cave. They think the shadows are real.

    In this episode we take a 2,400-year-old thought experiment from Plato and drop it right into your office. The boss who micromanages and calls it "quality control." The Sunday night dread you've been told is normal. The voice in your head that says "everyone deals with this." Those are shadows on the wall. They are not reality.

    Here's what we cover:

    • Plato's Cave allegory in plain English
    • Why your bad boss genuinely cannot see what you see
    • How toxic workplaces train you to mistake dysfunction for "just business"
    • The shadows people defend the hardest, and why
    • What it actually looks like to walk out of the cave

    If you've ever caught yourself defending a job that's quietly destroying you, this one is for you.

    This series pulls from Stoicism, Plato, Nietzsche, and modern workplace psychology to help you survive a bad boss without losing yourself in the process. Forty-five episodes. Real tools. Your sanity.

    Support the show:

    Donate any amount: https://donate.stripe.com/6oUaEX31FcHI1Rj9pJ1gs04

    Patreon (early access + bonus content): https://www.patreon.com/c/michaelkuhlman

    1:1 Coaching:

    Stuck in a job that's eating you alive? I do private coaching sessions for people navigating bad bosses, toxic workplaces, and career transitions. Reach out: badbossguide@gmail.com

    If this episode hit, leave a rating, share it with the friend you keep texting about their job, and follow the show so you don't miss the next one.

    Show More Show Less
    8 mins