Martyr Complex at Work: What is a Martyr Personality & How to Overcome Symptoms of Professional Self-Sacrificing – Dynamic Transitions LLP (2024)

Recently, several journalists have asked to interview me for articles on the work martyr complex. The phenomenon is likely as old as time, but currently, work martyr syndrome refers to the experience when you function in the workplace in a way that sacrifices yourself for the benefits of others – whether it’s other employees, your boss or clients, who you are sacrificing for doesn’t matter.

What is a Martyr Personality in the Workplace?

Here are some common work martyr complex symptoms:

  • You are the go-to person for when something goes wrong, someone has to stay late, or there is an emergency project
  • You notice that you are working longer hours than everyone else
  • You have trouble saying ‘no’ even to projects that are outside of your scope of work
  • You’ll fall on the sword if no one else does because taking responsibility is important to you
  • You tend to feel like others cannot manage certain things, and as a result, you micromanage or do their work yourself

Sound familiar?

If you have been following my Impostor Syndrome posts, you’ll see a significant connection between work martyrs and Impostor Syndrome. I imagine that this new identification of work martyr syndrome is really people with Impostor Syndrome in disguise.

Work Martyr Complex Treatments: Small & Large Steps

Often, it can feel really hard to leave this behavior behind and to try new, healthier behaviors in the workplace that set boundaries and reset expectations for yourself and others. If you have decided that you don’t want to continue in this role at work, then there are simple ways to begin to shed this martyr behavior.

Two Small Steps for Reducing Martyr Victim Complex at Work

1. Find an accountability partner.

Whether this person is from your workplace or outside doesn’t matter as much as whether this person will kindly, but firmly, hold you accountable to your goals and keep your confidence. While martyr behavior can place you in the role of a star at work with certain bosses, with others it can put you in the position of Gal/Guy Friday and keep you cornered in ways that are perceived as practically ineligible for advancement or promotion.

2. Set some management goals for eliminating work martyr complex symptoms.

For example, it can be as simple as taking a 60-hour workweek to 55 hours. You are looking for it to be attainable and to be able to show you proof that it doesn’t change your status at work immediately. So much of the buried fear can be that if you stopped giving so much at work, you will lose your position or favor. If you take really small steps, you will likely realize that not much is changing in regard to perception. After you are successful with a small step, then you can start taking larger, more impactful steps like:

Five Larger Steps for Shedding Work Martyr Complex

1. Learn to Say ‘No’

Learning to say ‘no’ to certain projects or involvement in activities, especially ones that are low stakes, are not part of your evaluation process, or take you off focusing on your priorities. They are done to obtain favor or please others, but you have to start asking yourself what’s the real impact for me.

2. Stop Being People’s emergency Go-To

When you are a work martyr, other people’s needs become your own. To break this, you have to learn not to take on other people’s feelings and to set boundaries. You can see and identify someone’s feelings without having to fix them or make them better.

3. Set Limits at Work & Create Routines for a Personal Life

Create limited bandwidth at work by having priorities and a plan to work on them, AND others things to do outside of work. If the time for which you have allotted for work can constantly be increased by taking up your personal time because you are not valuing it, then it makes it very hard to set limits. You have to care about and protect your personal time. This might mean that you have to work on creating routines for a personal life that you enjoy and hold sacred.

4. Take Responsibility Appropriate to Your Contribution

While taking responsibility for mistakes, errors, and issues is so incredibly important, when you take all the ownership, you deprive other people of that important experience and learning. You don’t protect them in any way – except growth. Now, it’s different if you are a manager and you are providing air cover for direct reports from senior leaders, but if you discover afterward that certain reports need to take responsibility, holding them accountable is part of your managerial responsibilities, especially if you want them to grow.

5. Stop Micromanaging Your Direct Reports

Often when you are so stretched for time because you engage in a lot of work martyring behaviors, it can feel very hard to appropriately manage and train direct reports, but as you start to create more time in your schedule, devote some of it to training so that you don’t feel like you need to take over reports’ projects, or that you can’t trust them with certain types of responsibilities into which they need to grow. You can also spend time on developmental coaching so that your reports become stronger and more autonomous.

Our Career Counseling Services Can Help Reduce the Experience of Work Martyr Complex Symptoms

Creating time for yourself in your workday by doing some of these tasks that I shared above can be helpful in spending more time on tasks related to being strategic in your role, within the organization, or with your long-term professional future. It’s important to note that if you try some of these things to reduce your role as a work martyr, and you get some blowback (i.e., senior leaders are unhappy) you really want to consider if this is a place where you can grow long-term. You need to be able to have the time to be a strategic level thinker to advance and to not be burdened by other people’s tactical work.

What have you done or noticed other people do to reduce the experience of being a work martyr? Contact us to set up a phone consultation or send us an email. We’d be happy to hear about your experience with work martyrdom syndrome and offer our career counseling services to you.

Martyr Complex at Work: What is a Martyr Personality & How to Overcome Symptoms of Professional Self-Sacrificing – Dynamic Transitions LLP (2024)

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Rob Wisoky

Last Updated:

Views: 5753

Rating: 4.8 / 5 (48 voted)

Reviews: 87% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Rob Wisoky

Birthday: 1994-09-30

Address: 5789 Michel Vista, West Domenic, OR 80464-9452

Phone: +97313824072371

Job: Education Orchestrator

Hobby: Lockpicking, Crocheting, Baton twirling, Video gaming, Jogging, Whittling, Model building

Introduction: My name is Rob Wisoky, I am a smiling, helpful, encouraging, zealous, energetic, faithful, fantastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.