
Is your legitimacy being questioned? Here’s how to respond
Having your legitimacy questioned can happen to anyone, particularly in novel, tense, or challenging circumstances. Here are three tools to deal with it....

by Robert Vilkelis Published July 8, 2026 in Brain Circuits • 3 min read
Toxicity rarely begins with behavior: it begins when reality splits. Most organizations can clearly explain how work is meant to happen. You hear it in all-hands meetings, onboarding, and leadership updates. The more revealing question is whether that version survives contact with reality on the ground. Consider three scenarios:
When a company’s official narrative and lived experiences of reality diverge, a new authority emerges. It does not happen in meetings, but in side conversations, workarounds, and disclaimers such as, “This is what leadership says, but here’s how we actually get things done.”
This structural split rarely happens overnight. It develops when what is communicated at the top and what is rewarded downstream begin to drift apart.
Consider a business that prides itself on delivering exceptional customer outcomes. If the sales team is incentivized purely on volume while the delivery team is held accountable for client experience, conflict is inevitable. Sales will overpromise to close deals, leaving delivery to absorb the consequences of poor-fit clients.
No one is acting irrationally. Each part of the system is responding to its incentives. The organization works, but with compromises. Over time, friction is normalized, people stop challenging the reality gap, and organizational unity erodes. Misalignment is rarely a failure of culture: it is a system producing exactly what it rewards.

In meetings, teams readily adopt the right language, endorse the strategy, and signal commitment. But superficial agreement does not mean a strategy can be executed as described. The starting point is simple: identify the gap – because until both realities are acknowledged, they cannot be reconciled. To do this, ask these diagnostic questions:
Remember: alignment is not achieved by reinforcing the party line, but by reconciling clashing realities so that the system no longer requires cognitive dissonance to function.
Toxicity begins when a gap between the official narrative and lived experience emerges, forcing teams to navigate competing truths. Reconciling these realities is the only way to build sustainable performance without losing trust.

Robert Vilkelis is an education professional with a track record of designing and delivering large-scale learning experiences that prioritize scalable structure and the people at its core. He has managed complex operations, led multi-layered teams, and driven measurable improvements in learner satisfaction, retention, and impact across international English camps and EdTech spaces.

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