Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have 15 lpartners at work and we talk to each other about vacations, how we are feeling, what we did over the weekend, bounding ideas of reach other, etc. he isn’t her boss — he’s her partner. The only thing that seems very different is that there are only 2 of them. If their business is successful and making money and their personal friendship allows the business to thrive, I don’t see a real issue. (If they are not doing well because they spend too much time chatting, that’s a different issue.)
I just can’t see how you benefit by making a big deal about this “emotional affair.” Obviously it improves his mood to have a friend that he is in business with. Do you want him in a worse mood? Do you want his business to dissolve because they feel awkward around each other? What do you gain by telling him he can’t talk to his business partner so much? It seems to me you gain nothing and potentially lose a lot.
Finall question—would you feel this way if it was a male partner?
This. If it’s same sex, you know you would think it’s just friendship. But it’s the opposite sex, so it’s an “emotional affair.”![]()
OP, insecurity is so unattractive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You can’t reasonably control—or even express an opinion on—how business partners choose to communicate.
I’d get therapy to deal with your jealousy and impulse to control this.
Fwiw, I am NOT calling you paranoid here. I can understand why you feel this way.
OP, if how I’m feeling is understandable, why do I need therapy to deal with jealousy??
Anonymous wrote:I have 15 lpartners at work and we talk to each other about vacations, how we are feeling, what we did over the weekend, bounding ideas of reach other, etc. he isn’t her boss — he’s her partner. The only thing that seems very different is that there are only 2 of them. If their business is successful and making money and their personal friendship allows the business to thrive, I don’t see a real issue. (If they are not doing well because they spend too much time chatting, that’s a different issue.)
I just can’t see how you benefit by making a big deal about this “emotional affair.” Obviously it improves his mood to have a friend that he is in business with. Do you want him in a worse mood? Do you want his business to dissolve because they feel awkward around each other? What do you gain by telling him he can’t talk to his business partner so much? It seems to me you gain nothing and potentially lose a lot.
Finall question—would you feel this way if it was a male partner?
Anonymous wrote:My DH has a friend like this from 40 years ago when there worked together. He talks to her once or twice a week for like an hour. She live 1,000 miles away so they see each other rarely.
He has always had close female friends... he went to Sarah Lawrence!
Anonymous wrote:You can’t reasonably control—or even express an opinion on—how business partners choose to communicate.
I’d get therapy to deal with your jealousy and impulse to control this.
Fwiw, I am NOT calling you paranoid here. I can understand why you feel this way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would call this an emotional affair. It’s definitely way beyond a business relationship or even a normal friendship.
You'd be wrong.
He's clearly pretty open about it all. So now nobody is allowed to have friends of the opposite sex? Or close working relationships? JFC some of you need to grow up and stop being so insecure.
My friend’s husband was very open about everything except for the little fact about banging his coworker. Som people think it’s easier to hide in plain sight.