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When Standing Up Looks Like Lashing Out – Understanding Reactive Abuse in Professional Spaces

  • Oct 7, 2025
  • 4 min read

Jontai Reynolds is a published author and community activist who explores healing, resilience, and the human experience.

Executive Contributor Jontai Reynolds

When the quiet person in the professional world “snaps,” they’re often labeled the problem, but what if their reaction is a symptom of months of covert manipulation or workplace bullying? This article explores reactive abuse, how it manifests in professional settings, and how organizations can respond with empathy instead of punishment.


Person in black blazer leans over laptop at wooden desk, hand on forehead, appearing stressed. Mouse, phone, and coffee cup nearby.

When the “problem employee” isn’t the problem


We have all seen it before. That dependable, composed employee who suddenly loses their cool in a meeting. Voices rise. HR is alerted, and within hours the label sticks, “Unstable.” “Unprofessional.” “Hard to work with.” What if that emotional outburst wasn’t aggression, but a human response to psychological harm?


This is the paradox of “reactive abuse,” a hidden dynamic that thrives in workplaces obsessed with composure and “professionalism.” It is the emotional explosion that follows months, sometimes years, of subtle gaslighting, undermining, and provocation.


Too often, it’s misread as the problem when it’s really the proof.


“Reactive abuse is what happens when the person being pushed finally pushes back, and that pushback gets used to define them as the problem.”


What is reactive abuse?


Reactive abuse happens when someone under chronic emotional manipulation or workplace bullying finally reacts, and that reaction is then weaponized against them. It is a psychological bait-and-switch where the true aggressor plays calm and victimized, while the target, now visibly upset, appears unstable.


Common examples at work include:


  • A manager undermines your credibility in front of peers, then calls you “too sensitive” when you address it.

  • A coworker spreads rumors, then plays the victim when confronted.

  • A leader disciplines you for “tone” after you refuse yet another unpaid or unrealistic task.


The result? The abuser is seen as composed and rational. The target becomes the “difficult one.”


The setup: How the cycle is engineered


Reactive abuse does not start with the reaction, it starts with a pattern. Let’s break it down:


  1. Gaslighting in professional clothing: “You’re imagining it.” “That’s not what I said.” “You’re overreacting.” Each phrase chips away at your trust in your own perception. Over time, self-doubt replaces self-assurance.

  2. The “professionalism” paradox: Many professional spaces or workplaces equate professionalism with emotional restraint. This allows manipulators to provoke freely, knowing that any visible emotion from you will make you look unprofessional.

  3. Strategic provocation: Subtle digs, exclusion from key projects, performative “feedback.” The aggressor builds tension, knowing you will eventually react, and that one reaction will justify every future criticism.

  4. Public image control: The manipulator stays calm and composed in front of others, controlling the narrative. When you finally react, they only need to say, “See what I mean?”


Why it is so hard to prove


Most HR investigations focus on behavioral incidents, not patterns of provocation. They see the visible moment of conflict, not the invisible months of erosion leading up to it. This bias creates what psychologists call the “reactivity trap,” a dynamic where the target’s stress response is mistaken for misconduct.


A 2023 Journal of Applied Psychology study found that employees exposed to chronic workplace incivility were 4.6 times more likely to display stress-related “counterproductive” behaviors. In most cases, these reactions were punished instead of contextualized.


The aftermath: What happens to targets


Reactive abuse leaves more than just professional damage, it can trigger long-term emotional fallout.


Victims often experience:


  • Shame and confusion, “Maybe I really did overreact.”

  • Hyper-vigilance, editing tone, emails, and facial expressions to avoid being “misread.”

  • Isolation, colleagues withdraw to avoid conflict.

  • Career derailment, being labeled as “difficult” or “unstable,” impacts promotions and trust.


It is not just burnout, it is betrayal trauma in a corporate disguise.


Recognizing the signs


If you are wondering whether or not you are caught in a reactive abuse cycle, ask yourself:


  • Do small interactions leave you questioning your memory or motives?

  • Do you feel like you must “walk on eggshells” around certain coworkers?

  • Has your emotional reaction ever been exaggerated or used against you?

  • Are you the only one being told to “calm down” when conflict arises?


If so, it is not that you are overreacting, it is someone provoking you into reaction.


How professional spaces (workplace) can interrupt the cycle


Reactive abuse thrives in ambiguity. To dismantle it, organizations must move beyond behavior policing and start addressing contextual harm.


  1. Train leaders in emotional intelligence. Teach managers to recognize subtle manipulation tactics and understand trauma-informed responses to conflict.

  2. Investigate patterns, not just incidents. Encourage HR to look at timelines, communication patterns, and power dynamics, not isolated events.

  3. Redefine professionalism. Professionalism should include emotional authenticity. Anger, frustration, or tears are human data points, not misconduct.

  4. Protect psychological safety. Policies should protect employees who report patterns of mistreatment, not punish them for reacting to it.


Healing from reactive abuse


If you have experienced reactive abuse, recovery starts with rewriting the story others told about you. Here are a few tips:


  1. Reframe your reaction. You did not “lose it,” you hit your limit.

  2. Seek validation. Connect with trauma-informed coaches, therapists, or mentors who understand this dynamic.

  3. Rebuild boundaries. Learn to set limits early, not after burnout.

  4. Reclaim your professionalism. Your emotional awareness is a strength, not a flaw.


“In toxic systems, the person who speaks up will always look more disruptive than the person who caused the harm.”


Closing reflection: When the quiet ones finally speak


Workplace culture often rewards calm over honesty, and silence over courage. But reactive abuse challenges that illusion. When someone finally breaks the pattern, when composure gives way to raw truth, it is not chaos. It is clarity breaking through control.


So before labeling a colleague’s reaction as “unprofessional,” pause and ask, "What pain made their voice shake? What patterns pushed them there?"


Sometimes, the person who “lashes out” is really the only one brave enough to finally say, “This isn’t okay anymore.”


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Read more from Jontai Reynolds

Jontai Reynolds, Author

Jontai Reynolds is a published author of The Counselor’s Curse, Twisted Allegiance, and No One Saw Her Coming: A Story About Reactive Abuse. She has also created several healing journals and workbooks. Beyond writing, Jontai is a dedicated community activist who serves in multiple leadership and service roles.

This article is published in collaboration with Brainz Magazine’s network of global experts, carefully selected to share real, valuable insights.

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