Ask HN: Is FAANG possible if you have a serious mental illness?

34 points by tempacct747 ↗ HN
Please give your advice if you are a successful software developer at a major company, despite having a serious mental condition such as bipolar or schizophrenia.

Did you disclose your condition to your employer/coworkers?

Does your employer offer you any accommodations?

Do you have any other advice?

44 comments

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Based on my own FAANG experience managing people with serious illness, it's all going to come down to your manager. My company had great resources to help people get help and support, as well as a great leave policy. Leaves didn't count as time when factoring in performance (i.e. leaves aren't supposed to hurt you). One team member of mine had a few leaves over the year, including one of 4+ weeks, and still managed to get an Exceeds rating.

The massive caveat here is that the pressures of work are still very high, and can (and certainly did here) contribute to and/or trigger illness to begin with. With strong support, one could certainly succeed, but my opinion is that YMMV depending on your manager.

[created an account because I generally just lurk and not post, not to hide my identity although I might have considered that as well]

Diagnosed with bipolar disorder NOS when I was 32 after ten years of work, most of it in big tech. I was clearly acting very strangely at work at the time so there was no hiding something was going on. Spent 10 days in hospital getting diagnosed and medicated. Spent 30 days on leave after. When I returned I asked to be moved into a new role because I felt like the role I had moved to 18 months prior was a bad fit and contributed substantially to stress and that contributed to the manic episode. They didn't have space on my prior team (which was where I wanted to go) so I ended up in an adjacent team, working on things I was less familiar with, still a reasonably good fit.

The first 18 months after returning to work were the most difficult. Medication difficulties, difficulties coping with how I saw myself, how I felt others saw me, the feeling that my career would be slowed down or come to a halt, fear over losing my job and eventually ending up homeless, concerns over reduced life expectancy, etc. Job performance definitely suffered, especially the first 6-12 months. Nobody told me directly I was close to a PIP, but I definitely got the worst review I had ever had for that period ("Needs Improvement" sort of rating overall).

I did talk therapy weekly for ~3-4 years after the initial diagnosis. It helped a lot. If nothing else it made me realize I needed something outside of work that I cared about to help reduce the emotional ups-and-downs that came with work going well versus not (I had been extremely successful before the diagnosis, effectively getting promoted five times in five years).

To your questions: My current manager knows, but that's because I knew him before I was reporting to him and had talked to him about it at some point. My employer knows that I am in some kind of protected class because they sent a generic thing to everyone at the company at some point asking people if they were. As to accommodations, in the role before my current one I felt that I was very distracted in the office due to all the noise, so my direct manager let me work from home more than was "allowed" by upper management. I'm now in a role where that isn't possible, but at the same time I'm in a less noisy environment and feel like I'm dealing with the noise better.

Advice?

If you feel like you're really stable and really good at managing moods, etc., I think you'll probably do just fine. If you're not, work on that. Maintain a very stable sleep schedule, make sure you maintain relationships outside of work and make those a substantial focus, don't get too caught up in work or let your emotions get pulled all over the place based on what's going on at work. Take vacations when you have the time. Don't get too worried about whether your career will move as fast as others. I've had to step back a few times over the years since the diagnosis, and yes I think my career has moved more slowly than it could have, but I've come to terms with that.

Hope that helps. Feel free to ask follow-on questions and I'll try to answer.

What is a “protected class?”
No the OP but in America a protected class is someone who qualifies for special protection/considerations by law. Basically it is there to help prevent someone's condition from being used against them. According to wiki the US has 10 of them. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protected_group

edit: wiki lists 10 not 9

Small clarification, but in the US, the “protected class” is a characteristic not subset of the population.

So, “sex” is a protected class, and the protection applies to everyone. There have been cases protecting males from discrimination on the basis of sex (for example - where a state had a higher minimum drinking age for men than women).

Age is an exception. There are no protections for the young, only the old. There’s a certain age where (don’t know what it is) where you can’t be discriminated against, but below that you don’t have protections.
I believe SCOTUS hasn’t ruled that age is a “suspect classification” under the 14th amendment.

The federal ADEA (the Age Discrimination in Employment Act) only creates a right of action for people over 40.

It’s a weird one for sure. I wonder, if age were a suspect classification like sex, if the ADEA itself would be unconstitutional.

I mean wether SCOTUS found a right in the 14th amendment is neither here nor there. These sorts of things tend to come from laws passed by legislators.
Just to be clear, every US citizen fits into a protective class of some sort. It really prevents discrimination on the basis of your membership to a particular protective class. Like anything base on law/policy/etc. there are complexities, caveats, and exceptions.
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Yes, I knew someone who works at Facebook with schizophrenia. Facebook does accommodate him in various ways, such as time off to frequently see a psychiatrist to keep him on track. But in other ways too, such as a flexible work schedule and some work from home (this was before the pandemic.) So Facebook is good about this.
Are you sure? It would be like someone with Alzheimer's working at Facebook.
Positive. Schizophrenia and bipolar can be controlled very well with medication, but patient needs monitoring. That's why the weekly visits to the psychiatrist.
Accommodations are available for illnesses and disability but it's worth remembering that FAANG and similar companies are highly competitive and it's "either up or out" until you're promoted to the terminal level where that's no longer required. If stress exacerbates your illness, keep that in mind.
Based upon my experience, and as others have mentioned, it all boils down to the person you are reporting to. I am at a stage in my career that I don't give a f'ck (never really gave a f'ck even when I was starting my career) - and I am being more open about my mental-health challenges because there is a needless stigma associated with mental-health issues and also ignorance (many consider it to be a 'weakness' - and I have had many talk/mention mental-health in such terms).

My advice is to find the right people to work with. Life is too short to work with d'cks and those who don't have empathy to others - and there are plenty of such a'holes in all industries - but more so in FAANG, nee MMAGAN (Meta & Microsoft) where it is not only the toxic bro-culture, but also always trying to find some 'weakness' in others.

Your right about empathy, but we disagree strongly on how to think about the problem. Do you not see mental illness as something individuals can strive to overcome?

> needless stigma

> ignorance…many consider it a ‘weakness’

I hear your point, I really do. But my experience with mental health is that it is, very often, a weakness. Remember, I’m not saying an individual is weak for failing to cope with mental illness, but that individuals are characterized by many strengths and weaknesses (socially constructed, yes, but real nonetheless, and mental health is surely a weakness. Somebody that couldn’t get any sleep Sunday night because of their issue isn’t going to bring a valuable, interesting, and diverse perspective to the workplace on Monday. They’ll seem like a raving lunatic, and even if this meeting can be moved to Tuesday, how is this not a weakness? The key to handling any weakness to understand it and compensate where you can. I worry that perspectives like yours trivialize the complexity of mental health awareness and accommodation.

> Do you not see mental illness as something individuals can strive to overcome?

Yes they can overcome indeed.

> But my experience with mental health is that it is, very often, a weakness. Remember, I’m not saying an individual is weak for failing to cope with mental illness, but that individuals are characterized by many strengths and weaknesses (socially constructed, yes, but real nonetheless, and mental health is surely a weakness.

To be honest most will never understand people with mental illnesses, even the closest ones. You have to have experienced such a struggle in order to understand them. Do you think broken arm a weakness? probably not same applies to mental illness, mental illnesses are mostly due issues in brain functioning, if not why drugs improve their symptoms.

>Somebody that couldn’t get any sleep Sunday night because of their issue isn’t going to bring a valuable, interesting, and diverse perspective to the workplace on Monday.

So... how do you react when a coworker has a baby? Basically expect them to be weak, raving lunatics for the next 1 to 3 years?

Really hope you're not one of my coworkers.

i was diagnosed with schizoprenia and work for Amazon.

You dont have to disclose it.

FAANG or not I never and would never disclose any serious mental illness.

It can go way too fast from compassion to "he failed at this because he's mentally ill and we should never have hired a lunatic like him in the first place".

Don't talk about it, do your best to manage it outside of work, ask for remote work and a flexible schedule(because you're human not because you're ill).

If you need a few days off ask your doctor for a leave of absence and only say it's for medical reasons without ever mentioning the specifics.

But honestly I think it's kinda crazy to want to work at a FAANG when you have any kind of illness, it's already awfully hard/stressful for healthy/normal people, it seems like torture to manage an illness while working there.

Bipolar here. When I was diagnosed, though not in a FAANG, and asked for accommodation HR, my managers and company owners went against me and fired me. They didn't care about my diagnosis and was against the law but they preferrer to pay me off with a severance agreement and let me go than to understand what mental illness is about.

TBH I don't blame them. This shit is really hard to grasp even to my self. Therefore I only have one very good advice: fake it and never ever tell anyone about it. Not even your friends, less your coworkers.

Mental illnesses are not even understood at medical or research level. I honestly believe this can only be understood by very well trained professionals or anyone who experience the symptoms themselves or from a very close relative. It's really hard to be compassionate with this stuff.

My advice again, keep your mouth shut up, fake it and have a list of very good excuses. Say you have cancer, idk, anything will be better than going out with the mental illness. It's a path of no return and can very well kill all growth in your career as people will talk and place red flags you can't remove thereafter.

Life is way more important than our jobs. Don't try to push more than you physically can, even if you believe you can archive more (specially in mania phase).

Good luck, hope you are doing as well as you can.

Thanks for making this comment. I’ve often thought alone similar lines.

The state of mental health advocacy is shallow and hyper positive. They imagine that mentally ill people are just one mental trick or accommodation removed from being able to fit in to our new inclusive culture.

Instead, it’s more like an extremely junior employee giving a presentation to prospective applicants that has them making colorful, three dimensional “modern” resumes that I know would get tossed in the dumpster by any hiring manager at the firm.

Not to use 2020’s favorite word: but it’s like being gaslit by a person that isn’t old enough to understand what they’re saying isn’t true.

“You’re gaslighting me!”

[honest] “No I’m not!”

…lol… this is based on an example from my work. I wish I could put to words just how trendy their recommendation template was.

I know it's illustrative but telling your job that you have cancer (if you don't) is an awful, awful idea.
During a manic phase bipolar patients also start to become compulsive liars, so it's not unrealistic.
With a lot of people, once they know (or just believe) you have some kind of mental illness, you no longer have a personality or character, you have a collection of symptoms. That's a big part of what the stigma is. Yeah, don't mention it to anyone at work, ever. If you happen to be at work and a bottle of prozac falls out... that's for your "premature ejaculation" problem (which while awkward and embarrassing, is less detrimental than your chronic clinicial depression.) Risperdol? Nope, not for anything antipsychotic. That's for your nerve pain in your toes. Etc, etc.
Trading off income for job security and benefits might be a good move. Something that should be prioritized is being able to file for disability if you need to someday. I think you have to have a certain number of credits with Social Security for that - it is a concern if you haven't spent much time in the workforce.

A job with a FAANG, or a government contractor, would probably be the most stressful options.

A nonprofit or government agency will probably be the most tolerant of disabilities - but I still wouldn't formally ask for accommodations if it required sharing medical details. Definitely not unless protected by a union.

If you need time off for medical appointments, because you just feel terrible on a particular day, or even hospitalization, then don't act ashamed, but don't share any details.

Lots of people have lots of different kinds of disabilities, and if you are able to function within your allotted leave and get your work done, then nobody has a right to complain.

In terms of interviews, if you have not been able to work in the past, the key to resume gaps is to make it clear that the circumstances have changed, and there is obvious evidence of that. The only reason people care about gaps is they worry you might be flat out unemployable.

"After dropping out of college several years ago due to a health condition, I was able to return and get my degree, and since then I've been volunteering at ... and writing code in ... in my spare time..."

Why were you able to return? New treatment, medication, doctor...

It’s extremely hard to find employers friendly to mental illness. My experience is that being a valued employee in the private sector is more secure than being a “protected” employee in the public sector.

Public sector employees who abuse job security are treated like crap by the people who pick up the slack. Understandably, but not justifiably.

Find a smaller employer and make yourself essential.

Focus on finding a place where you are happy.

Also make sure you have good insurance.

I don’t know about working from home. Many mentally ill people (OK, my family which has a big stretch of mental illness) find the idea of working at home terrifying because work is the only social outlet.

>Public sector employees who abuse job security are treated like crap by the people who pick up the slack. Understandably, but not justifiably.

If you're seriously considering a job with a FAANG, you should be a highly valuable employee elsewhere.

I was assuming I was addressing someone who is capable of sheer talent and productivity for a high paying job, but instinctively knows that in an interview they will seem "off" and if they are lucky enough to get the job, worry about maintaining a good relationship with their manager.

>Find a smaller employer and make yourself essential.

I disagree, although I'm no authority as I've mostly avoided them. The smaller a company is, the more it's like a family, and the more family-style dysfunction there is.

A job in government or with a big company can allow you to transfer somewhere else if things don't work out in one department. And people are less personally invested.

> The smaller a company is, the more it's like a family, and the more family-style dysfunction there is

Why do you say so? I thought startup family like culture is better than cooperate culture?

HN style startups I don't know about. Nobody ever offered me stock in my employer.

The overarching theme, I think, is that small businesses are more vulnerable, so there's more pressure on everyone, and fewer rules that matter.

Small companies, or sole proprietors, in my experience, like to pretend people are contractors. Woe unto you if you're 17 and naive enough to question the legality.

When I think of small businesses, I think of people demanding personal loyalty, lack of respect for the law and safety, and favoritism. I think of cult-like indoctrination. Bosses/owners who think it's ok to demand the same sacrifices of employees that they make to run the company. Lack of internal controls over financial matters, discrimination, or harassment.

Besides my general sense of the world, this is founded on my first couple of jobs after high school and before college, and experiences of relatives that ended up in odd places because they were really smart but didn't have a marketable degree.

> In terms of interviews, if you have not been able to work in the past, the key to resume gaps is to make it clear that the circumstances have changed, and there is obvious evidence of that.

How do you suggest one do that?

I described it immediately after the quoted sentence.

Only meant as an example. I think it's situation dependent.

If you have recently been hospitalized, and started new medication, that is an opportunity to separate your future from your past. Otherwise, whatever has changed for you, but demonstrated in actions and hard facts.

The truth works. Whatever convinces you will convince others. It just has to be phrased carefully, without sharing any information or connotations that are unnecessary.

If what you're doing isn't working, don't keep doing it, but set your sights lower. Temp agencies have saved me more than once in the past.

Can you do the job? Does your condition hamper you from doing the job? Keep in mind >50% of the job is collaboration.
I’m bipolar and have had a successful and pretty senior career at both FAANG and banks / hedge funds. I did have a manic episode while onboarding to a new company and when I went into a hospital for care they fired me. Of course I worked with lawyers to resolve things favorably. (This was a hedge fund, not a FAANG)

My advice is be certain you have a manager who is empathetic and accommodating in general. I would give this advice to any human being. We all need help sometimes and there’s not enough years to suffer assholes. I would also proactively engage a reputable and skilled employment law lawyer specializing in your local regulations as there can be very strong protections at local levels for mental health. If you have the money put them on retainer. Ideally you’ll never need them but having someone who can write a letter to your HR and manager if you need it and be taken seriously is worth it.

Yes, although be sure you are stable enough to handle the stress. I'm bipolar type 1, although I have only had full manic episodes after drugs. Those episodes lasted for months after the cessation of drug use.

I worked at a FAANG years ago, in internships. Not exactly the same as a full time SWE, but I think I got a taste of it. Unfortunately, this was when I was undiagnosed, and I ended up experiencing hypomania with some paranoid delusions during the internship. After being hospitalized my senior year of college, I took a job at a lower stakes company not on either of the coasts for several years after graduating from college instead of going back there or to a similar company. The stress and separation from my support network were not worth it for me, at the time.

Years later, I have a very successful engineering career at a public tech company. Therapy, and more importantly, correct diagnosis and medication saved me. It's not a FAANG, but I make around $300k TC in a low to mid cost of living area, working remotely, and am set to pay off my home before turning 30. Married with a dog, planning on kids. The expectations at the company are high, but it's not as stressful as the FAANG internships were. I considered going back to one, but the situation here is really good. I think what changed was more how I approach work than the challenge of the work itself. Medication seriously is a godsend.

It's not all peaches, though. At one point, during a hypomanic episode unrelated to work around pandemic and general stress, I broke down with my director on a Zoom call and ended up telling him that I'm bipolar and needed some help. He worked with me to remove me from the on call rotation, since sleep deprivation was my primary issue. I wouldn't recommend necessarily coming out with your diagnosis and would actively advise against it in most cases, but there are situations when you have really good relationships where it can go well. I don't feel like revealing my diagnosis in private with someone I trust has hurt my career in any way. On the contrary, it has helped me find a sustainable work environment.

I'd prefer to stay anonymous, but I'll monitor comments here for a few days if you have any questions. Good luck to you. Please try not to let your diagnosis hold you back, but also realize that it is OK to take a lower stress position to prioritize your health. I am happy that I didn't try to chase FAANG but wouldn't rule it out in the future if the right situation came along.

Where are you making $300k TC? How is the WLB?
I'd rather not say where, but look at large publicly traded tech companies with headquarters in the Bay Area. Check out levels.fyi for compensation information.

Note that the $300k is pretty variable due to stock price. 1/3 to 1/2 of my comp is RSUs depending on the price. I immediately sell to diversify, so it is like a variable cash payout to me. The current stock price is about 30% lower than it was when I got my last stock grant. They were too optimistic about the price in the letter spelling out my on track earnings as about $330k. Now, after the stock fell, it'll be around $275k, so I'm splitting the difference somewhat optimistically. :)

Work life balance is really good. It wasn't at first, when I was on call and trying to prove myself, but since then I've set clear boundaries and am performing well.

Interesting. I've been debating this personally lately. I work where I can pull 180k-220k pure salary with a very high degree of job security and low effort, and I've been toying with whether or not it'd be better to switch to big tech and try to make more for a few years at the expense of WLB.

Weirdly enough, I'm kind of on the other end though, just hit 30, 7 YOE, and not strong technically because background isn't CS. So I kind of don't know if I should just coast, or leetcode grind and try to go for 300-400k... I just hear horror stories of PIPs and up-and-out and it doesn't sound like fun...

Considering all the diversity hiring if anything it's probably an advantage to getting hired there while mental
Never disclose anything which would give your employer ammunition to build a case against you. This is the unfortunate sad reality.

From a HR risk perspective, what would the blast radius be if the employee was experiencing a manic episode? If given access to a company credit card, would they rack up loads of debt? Could they negatively impact the company's public image on social media? Could their grandiose state of mind rub colleagues the wrong way and potentially damage inter-team working relationships?

"Meta employee caught racking up large bar tab at Vegas strip club" is a genuine threat.

Then on the opposite side of the coin, what if that employee is experiencing a depressive episode? How would their team mates cope if that person's productivity absolutely tanked? How could their manager "defend" their actions without breaking confidentiality? How long would the company keeping paying a salary in the _hope_ they return to the "zero" state (neither manic nor depressive episode)?

What would the impact be during a depressive episode if you get fired? The downward spiral would accelerate, and unfortunately for some people, it's terminal.

Companies love to send HR on mental health training days to get a rubber stamp (and broadcast it as marketing material), but the truth is, they know absolutely nothing about the real impact of it.

There are numerous reasons why I'm a contractor and not a regular employee - first and foremost to protect myself.

If anyone wants to chat my email should be in the profile.

only in management positions. there it is even a requirement.