Exactly. That was why I asked. |
It would be more appropriate to soothe the insecurities of a spouse, I suppose. But I would not expect my DH to take time from work in the middle of the day to have coffee to placate me. When I think of meeting for drinks - I think of the normal happy hour period....5 to 7 or so. It is not like they will be out all night. |
The whole premise of the movie is that men & women cannot just be friends. Sex always gets in the way. |
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OMG - I have dinner / drinks with a male coworkers at least once a month. Mostly males as I am an exec in a male dominated industry. Not the same one each time - different ones. It's to ask for career advice, catch up when teams change, etc.
I also have lunch with people, get coffee with people. It never occurred to me to tell my husband ahead of time except when I won't be home for dinner. I tell him about it afterward as part of our "how was your day" conversation when I get home. |
| Not if it's on a regular basis. One minute it's drinks and some laughs, next it's hot sex in some cheap hotel while wifey sits at home clueless. |
I'd also like to echo the poster above who said that if men and women can't go to dinner or drinks alone that this is one reason we need so many stupid mentoring / sponsoring programs at my workplace to help women get to senior levels. If top level men, and let's admit it's still mostly men, don't mentor and counsel women then the top rungs of corporate America stay male dominated. It would be very awkward and unprofessional for me to have a chaperone (aka my husband) at my business meals where I'm talking financials, making deals, or strategizing about my clients. |
ouch - nasty person |
Women can be friends with men. Men are only friends with women as a hopeful means to have sex with them. There I said it. And I meant it. Go ahead girls and gender confused men, fire up the chainsaws. |
No need for chainsaws. You're just wrong. |
Strangely enough, the more senior my big law partner DH has gotten, the less likely he is to go out after work with ANY co-worker, much less a single woman. He mentors several younger associates, but social interactions are limited to coffee or lunch, either of which he is happy to do. He used to also go to happy hour type outings, but decided that it is a huge appearance problem. Plus it is far more likely that the associate will say something (anything, really) personal after a drink. Since my DH doesn't want to become a sounding board for their personal lives, he makes it clear that they will maintain a professional relationship. |
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DH here. I probably would not go for drinks with a female co-worker. Then again, like 21:08 wrote, I probably would not go for drinks with a male co-worker either.
Coffee or lunch, yes. Drinks, no. |
| I wouldn't allow it. I think it's inappropriate! Who cares what everyone else is doing. You have to set guidelines within your own marriage. If you are uncomfortable with it, I don't think your reaction is unfounded. |
| Unless this woman Is much older and senior to him, you should be invited. If she is truly a friend, it is appropriate to invite you. |
| You aren't crazy or insecure for asking. I would honestly be uncomfortable unless I knew the other person. That's just the way I feel. |
This is insane. Men and women work together. Co-workers sometimes become friends. Sometimes friends want to talk outside the office (especially if it involves a planned work transition or issue at the company). While it's only been 10% of posters, I still can't believe people gave a problem with this. If it's too frequent, it's weird. If it's not during happy hour time or goes for hours, it's weird. If he lies about it, it's weird. If not, being psycho and paranoid is bad choice for everyone involved. And, god no, you should not invite yourself to a work conversation "unless the woman is much older and senior"--that's an insane request. Every DH is not having or planning to have an affair. And, yes, men and women can be friends (without the man wanting anything untoward). Really. |