Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a work husband, and when I got pregnant he invited me and my husband to a dinner with him and his wife. She gave me a ton of advice about being a new mom, and they gave us hand me downs, and were great. I became friends with her too, and one day she told me that sometimes she gets jealous because I get to spend more waking hours with her husband than she does, we talk about (technical) things she doesn't know about, and as a stay at home mom sometimes she felt "less than." I am glad she told me.
All four of us are still good friends.
This is OP and wow, yes! I work, but I definitely feel that have “relationships” and I’m a little jealous of that. My husband sometimes works 10 hour days around deadlines, and yes, he definitely spends more time a week in this “relationship” than he does with me, and then he comes home and brags about them. It sounds so irrational! How do I stop feeling this way without sounding like a desperate wife? I mean, I spend more time with my coworkers, too, but this feels different. I’m definitely not thinking of them when I’m not at work.
Anonymous wrote:
It’s normal for feel mildly threatened in these circumstances. Women in the workplace are often still deferential and enjoy being caring and somewhat maternal to their male superiors. Ask yourself how many trays of holiday cookies are given to male doctors/dentists, etc. by female patients(of all ages) versus those received by female practitioners by patients of either gender. We all intuitively know that many workplaces recreate patriarchal families where the siblings compete for Daddy’s approval. Learn to let it go unless you see evidence of philandering- jealousy always weakens your position.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you feeling about yourself?
dp- how does op’s self image affect her husband not respecting boundaries?
His actions reflect upon him.
What boundary did he not respect?
Whatever boundary that is making his wife uncomfortable? Each marriage has boundaries that protect the marriage. They should have them, anyway.
What is the boundary he crossed? Spell it out.
op says her husband thinking of his work wives when he’s not at work and talking about his workwives when he’s off work and home? Is that correct, op?
You think you can set a boundary on what another human *thinks* about? Wow that is some controlling behavior.
Come on, I am not op. I don’t think op wants to control her husband’s thoughts.
I don’t think op compliments her male coworkers or constantly brings them into conversation when she’s home sharing time with her husband.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you feeling about yourself?
dp- how does op’s self image affect her husband not respecting boundaries?
His actions reflect upon him.
What boundary did he not respect?
Whatever boundary that is making his wife uncomfortable? Each marriage has boundaries that protect the marriage. They should have them, anyway.
What is the boundary he crossed? Spell it out.
op says her husband thinking of his work wives when he’s not at work and talking about his workwives when he’s off work and home? Is that correct, op?
You think you can set a boundary on what another human *thinks* about? Wow that is some controlling behavior.
Anonymous wrote:My DH has always had a work wife, but they have always been older and worked hard to make him look good. So I loved them. But I did mention to him at one point that I wouldn't have loved it had they been young and hot, even when I was still young and hot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you feeling about yourself?
dp- how does op’s self image affect her husband not respecting boundaries?
His actions reflect upon him.
What boundary did he not respect?
Whatever boundary that is making his wife uncomfortable? Each marriage has boundaries that protect the marriage. They should have them, anyway.
What is the boundary he crossed? Spell it out.
op says her husband thinking of his work wives when he’s not at work and talking about his workwives when he’s off work and home? Is that correct, op?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you feeling about yourself?
dp- how does op’s self image affect her husband not respecting boundaries?
His actions reflect upon him.
What boundary did he not respect?
Whatever boundary that is making his wife uncomfortable? Each marriage has boundaries that protect the marriage. They should have them, anyway.
What is the boundary he crossed? Spell it out.
op says her husband thinking of his work wives when he’s not at work and talking about his workwives when he’s off work and home? Is that correct, op?
Op also said he does the same with male coworkers
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you feeling about yourself?
dp- how does op’s self image affect her husband not respecting boundaries?
His actions reflect upon him.
What boundary did he not respect?
Whatever boundary that is making his wife uncomfortable? Each marriage has boundaries that protect the marriage. They should have them, anyway.
What is the boundary he crossed? Spell it out.
op says her husband thinking of his work wives when he’s not at work and talking about his workwives when he’s off work and home? Is that correct, op?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How are you feeling about yourself?
dp- how does op’s self image affect her husband not respecting boundaries?
His actions reflect upon him.
What boundary did he not respect?
Whatever boundary that is making his wife uncomfortable? Each marriage has boundaries that protect the marriage. They should have them, anyway.
What is the boundary he crossed? Spell it out.
Anonymous wrote:I have a work husband, and when I got pregnant he invited me and my husband to a dinner with him and his wife. She gave me a ton of advice about being a new mom, and they gave us hand me downs, and were great. I became friends with her too, and one day she told me that sometimes she gets jealous because I get to spend more waking hours with her husband than she does, we talk about (technical) things she doesn't know about, and as a stay at home mom sometimes she felt "less than." I am glad she told me.
All four of us are still good friends.