Glass & grit

The Work Persona: Why the Cat is Your Spirit Animal

In the jungle of corporate life, you don’t want to be the noisy parrot irritating everyone every time you open your mouth. Nor do you want to be the vulnerable sloth, ridiculed for being so limited, or the shy deer, who could disappear without anyone noticing. No, my friend. You want to be the jaguar. Sleek. Mysterious. Present, yet untouchable. The kind of creature that people admire, but never quite figure out. That’s your work persona.

What is a Work Persona?

A work persona is the curated version of you that you bring to the office. It’s not fake—it’s just… edited. Like a cat, you let people see what you want them to see. You are engaging, but never overshare. You are warm, but not clingy. You are competent, but don’t hustle for validation. You understand that the workplace is not your therapist’s office, nor is it a confessional booth.


A work persona isn’t about deception; it’s about self-preservation.

Why You Need One

1. Your Personal Life is Ammunition


Anything you reveal can and will be used against you—or at least, used to define you in ways you may not like. A rough patch in your relationship? Suddenly, you’re “too emotional and likely to make bad decisions.” Someone in your family sick? Now you’re the one who’s “going to be distracted and not give it their all.” Even if your colleagues mean well, information spreads and becomes a liability. Once people start seeing you through a lens of struggle, they forget your strengths.

2. Mystique Commands Respect

Think about the people in your workplace who are respected. They are confident, in control, and somehow always seem to know what they’re doing. That’s the cat energy. When you don’t spill your entire life story over lunch, people assume you have it together. And in the corporate world, perception is half the battle.

3. Office Drama is a Black Hole

If you overshare, you invite others to do the same. The next thing you know, you’re entangled in someone else’s workplace soap opera, and it’s draining your energy. A cat listens, nods, maybe offers a well-placed “That sounds tough” before stretching luxuriously and moving on. Be the cat.

4. You Control Your Narrative

Instead of letting your stress, struggles, or personal dramas shape how people see you, you feed them the highlights. Your weekend? “Had a fantastic brunch.” (No need to mention the existential crisis you had after.) Your vacation? “So relaxing.” (Even if your flight was delayed for six hours and you almost lost your luggage.) This isn’t about lying—it’s about keeping the conversation light and steering clear of anything that can be used to define you negatively.

How to Build Your Work Persona

Step 1: Curate Your Stories

Prepare a handful of neutral, feel-good anecdotes to sprinkle into conversations. Your new favorite café, the book you’re reading, a small win from the weekend. Keep it light. Keep it interesting.

Step 2: Master the Art of Selective Sharing

When asked personal questions, answer in a way that gives just enough without opening the door too wide. “How was your weekend?”—“Great! I finally tried that new bakery, and their croissants are unreal.” End of story. No need to dive into the family drama that later ruined Sunday dinner.

Step 3: Be Warm, but Not Overly Familiar

Cats don’t throw themselves into anyone’s lap—they choose where to sit, and it’s always on their terms. You can be friendly and engaging without feeling the need to be everyone’s best friend. This keeps you in control of your boundaries and your energy.

Step 4: Avoid Oversharing Under Stress

The urge to vent can be strong when work gets overwhelming. But remember: what you say in frustration today can become tomorrow’s perception of you. If you need to blow off steam, call a friend outside the company, journal it out, or take a walk. Your workplace is not your emotional dumping ground.

The Final Takeaway

Your work persona isn’t about being cold—it’s about being strategic. You can be respected, liked, and even admired, all while keeping a part of yourself just out of reach. So walk into that office with the grace of a feline: aware, self-assured, and always in control of your own narrative. After all, the cat doesn’t chase attention. It draws people in. And that’s exactly the energy you want in your career.

When the Story and the Reality Don't Line Up

If your job feels heavier, messier, or more confusing than it should, it’s not always a “you” problem.

Often it’s a mismatch between a company’s strategy and how it actually operates, and you’re living inside the consequences.

In this short, free video, we explain:
•⁠ ⁠How strategy and business models are meant to fit together
•⁠ ⁠What misalignment looks like in real workplaces
•⁠ ⁠What you can do when the structure isn’t serving you

No hustle culture. No “fix yourself” energy. Because that’s not our thing. Just a clearer way to understand what’s actually happening at work.

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