A stick in the mud antisocial is absolute career suicide in my company. |
| Op, you are probably his biggest regret. |
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The only thing wrong with this picture is that you are sitting at home, waiting up for him...
Why didn't he bring you along? Isn't that what company parties are for?? |
| OP, you sound like my best friend. She literally sits and waits for her husband to get home from work. She has very few friends. They've been married for almost 5 years now. Please get some hobbies or friends. PP is right. Why didn't you attend the party? |
Not all holiday parties allow for spouses or significant others due to budgetary constraints. My team is having our holiday party next week at a local lounge (about 25 of us). No spouses invited. |
I think we worked for the same company
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I was wondering this too. If spouses are not invited, then they should bail early. Show up to to show up but companies can't expect people will want to just.... be with the same exact people as work for hours outside of work. |
In my experience, it's usually the higher ups that are drinking and cutting loose the most. While I would agree it's not advisable to try to match their level of inebriation, the reason they're throwing the party is to express gratitude for their employees' hard work and to give them a chance to let loose and forget about work for a few hours. You would never last in my company! |
Bow chica bow bow?? |
| OP have you gotten the message that you were being ridiculous about this? Don't let this be a habit. |
This depends a lot on industry, personalities, whether you're a cool guy or not, etc. I made partner mostly by developing close personal relationships with a few key guys, and a lot of that came from going out together and hitting the bars pretty hard. I would never trust a junior colleague who follows the "one drink and treat it like work" approach. Relax, dude. All the good work in the world doesn't make up for having no personality (or better yet being a transparently scheming little weasel). |
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More background is needed. Is there some reason to worry? If he's cheated yeah I'd need him to have his azz home at a reasonable hour. But if this is the case for you I'd contemplate if I even want to be married to someone I have to constantly monitor.
Also, my husband always takes me to his company Christmas party. Is there some reason you couldn't attend? |
I worked for a very similar company in my 20s too. It was amazing. Tons of fun young people, epic happy hours, and the best holiday party ever. No one cared if you drank a lot and they gave out probably 10k worth of prizes. |
| My DH is not a drinker, but every time there is a work event (Xmas party, annual meeting, whatever) he hangs out just as late as everyone does, nursing a beer or two and being a company guy. He has ended up at a strip club before with his old boss, all sorts of ridiculous stuff. Its actually an impressive routine that he has down, because I am *not* able to fake having a fun time with a bunch of drunks when I am not. But, that is his company culture, so that is what he has to do to keep in the good graces of the higher ups. |
My firm has a no spouse/SO rule at our holiday party, which I think is ridiculous. Saves us money on a babysitter though. My DH will typically go for a glass of wine, make the rounds, then leave. |