| Trust your gut, OP. |
| Given the historic power inequality between men and women in the workplace, women should be very careful doing stuff like that, it could be interpreted as a sign of weakness. |
Ugh! I’m literally spending all the time I can with him. It’s a crazy schedule, but it’ll be over in a year.! I can’t possibly give him more time and he’s completely out of his mind if he thinks jealousy is the way to go. |
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My guy had a “work wife”. They got lunch out often. Very pretty woman, who was happily married, and enjoyed the company of a man who wasn’t hitting on her. I did not love it, but recognized it as harmless. Not an emotional affair. That’s not always the situation with those friendships, but this one was innocent. They didn’t communicate outside of work either. We all have people in our office that we gravitate toward socially. That’s normal. I have no idea what is going on with your situation. For all you know she could be a compulsive baker and he’s an easy outlet for her manic cooking.
Talk to him about it instead of speculating. |
THIS. Asian female here and I've made it a point since day 1 not to paint myself into the docile, subservient Asian role or the mom role. So I don't even bring in homemade anything for potlucks (bc I rarely cook and not well enough to serve anyone), so I certainly am not going to warm up some man's lunch to make sure sweetie has a hot meal. I'm all for team stuff -- I'll pick up food or a coffee box or whatever for the group if I'm out and they've asked/I know they won't have time -- but that's not a man-woman thing, it's for a whole team. I feel like the only time anyone was involved with anyone's eating was back in my biglaw days where I was young and high energy enough that I could just blow thru deadline after deadline and not eat. And in those instances I had exactly 2 people -- 1 female senior and 1 male peer -- both of whom were friends outside the office, who'd remind me once in a while to eat/take a break; but I'd do the same for them too. And in my current office, I feel like we ask each other if they'd like us to pick up something if we know something is going on with them -- i.e. late in pregnancy and it's hard to walk over to get lunch; just came back from some kind of medical recovery and aren't feeling great etc. and that's done for everyone, man or woman. |
| Only time I’ve seen any woman involved with any man’s lunch at the office was in my NYC biglaw days where there were a few old school partners who had their secretaries get their lunches. Even then, they weren’t heating up his lunch. They were heading out to the deli to get him whatever he normally ate. And it wasn’t seen as being kind/polite/friendly/hitting on him, it was a part of their jobs just like opening his mail and answering his phones; it was only old school partners of a certain age that requested their secretaries do this. |
Totally forgot about this. My DC firm had this dynamic too but it was 100% a work place responsibility, not being extra friendly to 1 particular guy. Like when people were hired and responsibilities were discussed, one of them was dealing with catering for conference and individual lunches. |
Same in my office but it's not really a man-woman thing. It can be, but often it's a female asking 9 mos pregnant Lisa if she needs anything since she's walking over to get lunch anyway. It's often a dude asking Steve if he wants him to pick up lunch bc first thing in the morning Steve regaled him with tales of his week hiking in Denali was the best thing ever but he totally sprained his foot. I mean nothing wrong with asking an opposite sex coworker if you know what their issue is, but it's something done between friends and often the closer friendship in my office are same sex. |
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If she's more than 30 yrs older than him and the office grandma, let it go.
Otherwise, this woman knows EXACTLY what she's doing. I grew up in a close ethnic family -- lots of Sunday dinners etc. The etiquette in my family was you made sure everyone was served in your home before you started eating -- so often you were walking a piece of cake over to Uncle Bob and your cousins sitting on the other side of the room; and yes disproportionally it was the female relatives/cousins worried about whether everyone was eating. So one time in high school we had cake in some class for some occasion and as it was being cut, I noticed that some of the kids sitting in one corner hadn't made a move towards the cake and didn't have any yet so unthinkingly I walked a few pieces over to them as I would at family functions. I STILL remember the reaction of surprise, thanks, you didn't have to do that (and prob thinking OMG she likes me) from one boy. And that's when I realized -- at like age 14-15, serving a man food is seen as a "close" connection and one I don't want with men who aren't my boyfriend/family. |
I’m the one that asked about what job doesn’t allow enough time for lunch breaks and if men are bringing lunch for other men and women for other women as well. And my thought is if it’s a job wide thing, then the person that is microwaving and bringing in lunch for you also has the same time crunch to get and eat their own lunch much less do for someone else. Once in a while is different than a regular thing. I also just couldn’t picture a job where it’s both too busy to eat and men bring a specific other man (not the group) lunch in a non romantic sense on a regular basis. |
We have this at my bank, too. Part of a secretary's job is to get food for her boss. We have male and female secretaries, and male and female bosses (split pretty 50/50 for the bosses, but 95% of secretaries are women). I felt weird asking the first few times, but pretty quickly realized the pace of work meant if I wanted to eat, I had to get them to bring it to me. |
I dunno, OP. Of course, it's POSSIBLE that he told you not to bother because he knows you're in a demanding program and was trying to lighten your load. I am interested to hear how exactly you found out that she warmed up the lunch that you made for him. That seems like a weird detail to discover. I don't think I've ever had a conversation with my husband about how he eats his lunch or what temperature it is. I vaguely know WHEN he eats lunch and generally what he eats because it's relevant to me being able to get in touch with him and what we have for dinner (e.g., if I'm looking for him at 11:30, he's most likely not at his desk phone because he eats lunch ridiculously early or he had chili at lunch, we have something else for dinner). I suppose that it is also possible that she made something and they were talking about it and she offered to bring him some. That actually happens at my office a fair amount in a mixed gender group of people who just love cooking. But if the friendship is setting off your Spidey senses, certainly you should talk to him about it. Just make sure that you are not projecting your insecurity due to not being able to spend much time with him onto a situation where it doesn't belong. |
This right here |
+100. What's next, are you going to iron his shirts for him?
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Damn I feel slow. At almost every job I've ever had, some woman has made me lunch or a dessert. A lady made me a cheesecake last year because I said it was my favorite dessert during an icebreaker. Another woman brought me a complete lunch in tupperware yesterday. She's attractive, but I didn't want to read too much into it. Now I'm wondering if I should say something or just enjoy the food. |