The Psych Eval You Never Agreed To

Some job interviews aren't evaluating your skills — they're running a psych audit without your consent. This episode breaks down the trauma-baiting culture-fit interview: what's actually happening, why it feels so disorienting, and how to walk in armed instead of exposed.

The Psych Eval You Never Agreed To
0:004:20
You walk out of a ninety-minute interview that covered no code, no portfolio, no case studies. Instead, you talked about the hardest day of your life. A relationship that ended badly. What your family taught you about failure. The interviewer nodded, shared just enough of their own story to keep you open, and the whole thing felt almost like a therapy session.
The next day: one email, four words. «We won't be moving forward.»
What makes this particular rejection disorienting isn't the outcome — it's the extraction. When an interview probes your personal history under the banner of «culture fit,» the rejection lands differently. They didn't evaluate your skills. They evaluated you — after you'd handed them everything. That's the trauma-baiting interview: a loyalty audit dressed as connection. This episode names what's actually happening in that dynamic, why the power asymmetry runs so deep, and how to walk into one of these sessions with your professional self intact — along with three lines you can use in the room if things get personal.

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