Oh I LOVE this angle. It’s relatable, vulnerable (in a workplace-safe way), and naturally positions Confetti without feeling salesy. I’ll write this in a fun, first-person voice that feels honest, warm, and lightly clever — about ~750 words.
I Used to Dread Team Events — Here’s What Changed
I have a confession.
I used to dread team events.
Not because I don’t like people. Not because I hate fun. But because there’s a very specific kind of anxiety that creeps in when someone says, “We’re doing a team bonding activity!”
You know the one.
It’s the What if I say something awkward?
The What if I’m the only one who doesn’t know what’s going on?
The What if this is secretly competitive and I let everyone down?
Even on remote teams, where you’d think it would feel lower pressure, I’d still feel it. The calendar invite would pop up and I’d think, “Can I just...observe?”
Spoiler: You can’t “just observe” in most team activities. And honestly? That used to terrify me.
The Pressure to Perform (Even When It’s “Fun”)
Here’s what I realized later: a lot of team events unintentionally create performance pressure.
You’re supposed to be:
- Clever on the spot
- High-energy
- Socially seamless
- Competitive (but not too competitive)
- Engaged (but not dominating)
It’s a lot.
And if you’re someone who tends to overthink (it's me, hi), that internal checklist can turn something meant to be fun into something that feels…exposed.
So when I started working at Confetti — a company that literally runs team events — I had a moment of panic.
Like. This is the job. Was I about to spend my career in the very situation that made me anxious?
What Actually Changed
Working at Confetti didn’t magically erase my anxiety. What changed was my understanding of what makes people feel safe in group settings.
And once I saw it from behind the scenes, everything shifted.
Here’s what I learned.
1. Structure Lowers Anxiety
The best team events don’t rely on random participation. They rely on thoughtful structure.
Clear instructions.
Small breakout groups.
Guided prompts.
Facilitators who set the tone.
When expectations are clear, the pressure drops. You’re not scrambling to figure out how to contribute. You’re simply responding within a framework. That structure makes participation feel safer.
2. There Are Multiple Ways to Show Up
I used to think participation meant being the loudest person in the room.
But I’ve seen firsthand that great team experiences are designed for different personality types:
- The storyteller
- The strategist
- The quiet observer who drops one killer insight
- The person who’s funny in the chat
- The thoughtful listener
You don’t have to become someone else to belong in the activity. You just have to show up as a version of yourself.
That realization alone softened something in me.
3. Psychological Safety Isn’t Accidental
Before working here, I didn’t think much about psychological safety. Now I see how intentional it has to be.
It’s in:
- The way a host frames an activity
- The normalization of “no wrong answers”
- The pacing
- The balance of collaboration over competition
The difference between “Oh no, I have to participate” and “Okay, I can do this” often comes down to those subtle design choices.
And once I started noticing them, I stopped bracing myself for embarrassment.
4. Everyone Else Is a Little Nervous Too
This one surprised me the most.
After participating in dozens of events — and talking to teammates candidly — I realized something: I was not the only one feeling anxious.
Even the confident people.
Even the managers.
Even the extroverts.
Most of us are quietly wondering how we’ll come across.
There’s something oddly comforting about that. It turns team events from a spotlight into a shared experience.
The Shift From Dread to Curiosity
Now when I see a team event on my calendar, I don’t feel that old spike of dread.
I feel…curious. Excited, even.
What will I learn about my team?
What random fun fact will I discover?
What moment will make me laugh unexpectedly?
Working at Confetti — and participating in Confetti events — didn’t turn me into the loudest person in the Zoom room.
But it did teach me this:
Team events don’t have to be about performing. They areabout connecting.
And connection feels very different from performance.
If You’re the Quietly Nervous One…
If you’re someone who joins team events with a tight chest and a backup excuse ready, I see you.
You’re not anti-fun. You’re not disengaged. You’re not “bad at culture.”
You might just need the right structure, the right facilitation, and the right kind of experience (which Confetti luckily provides).
The irony? The thing that used to make me anxious is now something I genuinely believe in.
Because when team events are designed thoughtfully — when they prioritize safety over spectacle — they don’t drain you.
They build trust.
They build empathy.
They build culture in a way that actually sticks.
And sometimes, they even help you rewrite the story you’ve been telling yourself about who you are in a room full of people.
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