Mirror Neurons and Workplace Relationships: Navigating Colleagues and Managers

Practical advice on managing workplace relationships while dealing with mirror neurons, including disclosure decisions and boundary-setting.

Mirror neurons are a type of brain cell that is activated both when performing an action and when observing another individual perform that same action, a process thought to help an individual recognize or understand the behavior of another. Mirror neurons were first discovered in the brains of macaque monkeys in the 1990s; since then, similar neurons have been identified in the brains of birds, mice, and, perhaps most notably, humans.

How Mirror Neurons Affects Workplace Relationships

Mirror Neurons can create unique challenges in professional relationships. Symptoms may be misread by colleagues and managers who lack context about what you're experiencing.

Common misunderstandings:

  • Quietness or withdrawal interpreted as disinterest or rudeness
  • Reduced output during difficult periods seen as laziness
  • Difficulty with conflict or assertiveness affecting professional standing
  • Physical symptoms (fatigue, headaches) misread as lack of commitment

To Disclose or Not to Disclose?

Whether to tell colleagues or managers about mirror neurons is a deeply personal decision with real tradeoffs.

Reasons to disclose:

  • Receive accommodations (flexible hours, remote work)
  • Reduce self-monitoring and masking energy drain
  • Build authentic relationships with trusted colleagues
  • Access HR support and legal protections

Reasons not to disclose:

  • Stigma and changed perceptions remain real risks
  • Information may spread beyond intended recipients
  • Not legally required in most situations
  • May prefer keeping work and health separate

Middle path: Disclose the impact ("I work best in the morning") without the diagnosis if full disclosure feels too vulnerable.

Setting Boundaries at Work

  • Energy management: Protect peak hours for high-demand work
  • Meeting hygiene: Push back on unnecessary meetings that drain resources
  • After-hours communication: Set clear expectations about response time
  • Workload conversations: Proactively discuss capacity with managers rather than silently struggling

Building Supportive Workplace Relationships

  • Identify 1–2 colleagues who can be trusted confidants
  • Participate in team activities that align with your energy
  • Communicate proactively when mirror neurons affects your work
  • Seek managers who prioritize psychological safety and results over presenteeism

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