Caseyfritz wrote:
Oh I know they enjoy it, my curiosity lies in why. What is the reasoning? Why do people do it in the first place? Is it so simple as if there is a reaction, they enjoy it? It can't be that simple.
It can be. There are a lot of people out there who just like getting others upset. It has become a common practice at my workplace because everyone there is so hyperactive (we hire a LOT of highschoolers) their reactions are so over-the-top that it's just funny. One girl in particular has asked if we annoyed her because she was funny when she was mad and we told her straight up YES.
Now if you just shrink back and are not okay, I don't see the point in provoking you, the point is not to upset, but to 'play'. Like when a coworker complained on me that I was calling her stupid. It ended up being a misunderstanding but for weeks I would be teased by my manager to not call names. It was upsetting but when I expressed that he told me to stop being dramatic. So I changed me. I would observe the kind of reactions that this teasing gets from others and imitate the ones that gets the most positive response- usually at my workplace I pretend to be more narcissistic than in reality. I made NO mistakes, regardless of what you just saw.
Lately I changed that because I got promoted and felt the need to be more honest. My openness at work has made me a target again too, and my workers are complaining on me for things that are just not happening. Luckily I have witnesses and people to protect me, but it seems this is not so at your workplace. If it continues to be a problem, bring it up with the highest level of management, or find a job where this does not happen as often (any job that hires a lot of high school kids or tends to go through employees quickly is going to have this type of atmosphere.)
Went off topic a bit there. Sorry. But yeah mostly it's just for the reaction. Sometimes it's that simple.