Over the past few weeks I have shared thoughts on workplace culture stemming from an incident during a program I was facilitating. The CEO made an off-hand and disrespectful comment about a colleague’s lunch, mocking curry for sure, and perhaps ethnicity. Then he said, “Why couldn’t the team just eat American?”
Nervous laughter followed. And in that moment, the culture of the organization quietly revealed itself. If you missed the series, you can read it here:
Part 1: Nervous Laughter – What Leaders Normalize Creates Culture
Part 2: The Longest Two Seconds in the Room
Part 3: The Moment That Changed the Culture Conversation
Your replies poured in, and as always my readers were thoughtful, candid, and often deeply personal in their responses. Many people described similar experiences when something inappropriate was said, everyone knew it, and the room collectively decided to pretend it hadn’t happened.
Reading those reactions reminded me of something important. Culture isn’t created by policies or programs. Culture exists in lived moments.
Silence Often Feels Like the Safest Choice
One reader wrote something that stopped me in my tracks:
“When someone believes their wellbeing is tied entirely to the approval of the person with authority, silence often feels like the safest choice.”
That sentence captures something we don’t talk about enough. When people laugh nervously in moments like that, it’s rarely because they think the comment is funny. It’s because they’re doing a quick internal calculation: Is it safe to challenge this person? Is it safe to challenge them here, publicly? What will speaking up cost me? When authority and security are tightly linked, silence and nervous laughter becomes the survival strategy.
Culture Is Built on What We Tolerate
Leadership expert Courtney Clark wrote:
“Culture isn’t what we do when we’re at our best. It’s what we tolerate when we’re at our worst.”
She’s right. It’s not the mission statement or the beautifully printed values on the wall. Culture is revealed in the uncomfortable moments that are not planned, but have a way of just happening.
Another reader put it this way:
“What often sounds like a harmless sentence, ‘that’s just the way he is’, is actually one of the most powerful culture-setting statements inside an organization.”
When behavior escapes scrutiny, it tacitly becomes the norm.
Many People Wondered: “What Would I Have Done?”
Several people wrote some version of the same question: What would I have done in that moment?
One reader joked:
“I would have said something. I like curry! Just because you don’t, doesn’t make it $&!?…!”
Another admitted something many people feel but rarely say:
“I doubt I would have said anything. I wouldn’t have felt safe confronting someone with an ‘You’re the CEO, so what?’ mentality.”
Isn’t that honesty and self-awareness beautiful?
Sometimes the Room Teaches the Leader
One reader made an observation I hadn’t considered:
“He was probably checked out after the discussion because he knew he had done something wrong.”
That may or may not be true based on this CEOs lack of self-awareness, but I hope so. It does point to something important. Even when no one directly confronts a moment, leaders often feel the temperature change in the room. Awareness can begin quietly.
Culture Changes When One Person Chooses Awareness
One comment captured the essence of the entire conversation:
“Sometimes changing those invisible rules begins with one person choosing awareness over silence.”
One of the things I love most about remembering and writing about these true life examples is the conversation that follows. Thank you for being in my life, sharing the moments, both painful and joyful and sharing your reactions. You make my personal and professional life richer.




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