Early in a job, someone told me, almost as a compliment, that I saw things other people missed.
That same month, they parked me on a task where seeing things was the last thing anyone needed from me.
I did the task. I did not love it. And on that topic, in those meetings, I went quiet in a way that was not like me.
You know this one already.
You have a thing you are genuinely good at. And somewhere there is a room, a project, a standup, where that thing never comes up. You sit in it, words ready, and you say almost none of them.
For a long time I read my own silence wrong.
I thought it meant I was difficult. Or checked out. Or ungrateful for a fine job that paid me well. I judged myself for it harder than anyone else ever did.
Wrong on every count. It took me years to hear what it actually was.
Here is the strange part, the part that surprises people.
Corners where nobody expected anything from me are exactly where I did my best work. A side task nobody was watching. A problem that was not mine to solve. Some thing I finished quietly while the assigned work sat there going nowhere.
And every time, people were surprised. They had filed me under the task in front of them, and then this other thing landed, sharper than the thing they actually asked for.
I used to think that surprise was a nice accident. A bonus. Proof I could stretch.
Flip that. The surprise is a signal, and it points somewhere specific.
It is proof you were standing in the wrong place the whole time.
When you light up in the corner nobody was watching, and stay flat on the work you were handed, you are not having a mood. You are reading a map. Your gift is quietly pointing at the seat you should have been given.
Most workplaces hire for the seat. Your gift is whatever you happen to bring on top of it. A role had a shape before you arrived, and you got poured into that shape. If your gift matches it, you are lucky. If it does not, you spend your days a little misplaced, doing fine work on the wrong thing, and going quiet on the part that should have been the whole point.
That gap is the most psychological thing in a full time job. It stays quiet. Nobody yells about it. You absorb it, month after month, and you call it normal.
Now the part people assume seniority fixes. It does not.
I have sixteen years in this. Real enterprise wins behind me. Titles that say four separate organizations looked at my work and chose it.
And I still sat in rooms, on assigned topics, holding something I could have said, saying nothing.
So if you are early and you feel this, please do not wait for seniority to rescue you from it. Seniority did not dissolve my silence. It only made me better at noticing it.
What I do with it now is simple.
I treat the silence as data. A flaw is what I used to call it, back when I was busy scolding myself.
When I keep going quiet on the assigned thing and keep lighting up on the unasked thing, I stop judging the gap and start reading it. That pattern tells me where my attention actually wants to live. Worth more than any performance review, because a review measures the seat, and the silence measures the gift.
You do not have to quit your job over this. I did not. But you can stop calling the silence a character defect. You can let it point.
An ache sits underneath all of it, and it is a specific one. Being seen, and still being misplaced. Someone noticing the exact thing you are good at, in the same breath that they put you somewhere it never gets used. A quiet kind of lonely, and plenty of capable people live inside it for years without ever naming it.
I named mine late. Telling you now so you can name yours early.
Your best work, the kind that lands when nobody asked, is the clearest thing you own. Your silence on the assigned topic is honesty, leaking out where the words refuse to come.
Listen to both. They are saying the same thing from two directions.
Your turn
Where do you go quiet at work, and is it the topic that bores you or the mismatch between your gift and your seat?
If this was useful
I work through this in public, the wins and the freezes both, mostly on LinkedIn and YouTube. If the real version of building a career in the open is useful to you, that is where it lives. Find me on X, GitHub, and the work at next8n.com.
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