Anonymous wrote:A few years ago I was waiting to go to a meeting with a c-level person but a woman was in his office talking to him. I finally tapped on the ajar door and said “sorry to interrupt but, Steve, we’re going to be late if we don’t get going now.”
The woman (I was about 30, she was about 50) said “oh honey, I didn’t see you there”. I didn’t call her out in front of Steve, and felt strange finding her later, but wish I’d said either in the moment “I prefer X” or found her later and said “when you called me honey earlier it made me think about my past job where I felt really disrespected. Please call me X”
Anonymous wrote:People using terms of endearment casually is one of my pet peeves. I had a receptionist who called everyone dear and sweetie on the phone. Put a quick stop to that.
I agree with being upfront. I don't think it needs to be confrontational. I would say that " I realize you don't you likely have good intentions or don't even realize you are saying it but I find it uncomfortable when you call me dear. Give him a chance to respond then say thanks for understanding and being responsive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It bothers me as I feel it is condescending, though probably subconsciously. This colleague is one year older than me though always behaves as if he is far older and more experienced than me. He is more senior than me in job title but we currently have the same level of role (he is not my boss and I don't have to answer to him but I have to work with him). He says it to most women but not men. Would you say something? How?
Call him Honey.
And smile
No. For the umpteenth time, this isn’t how this is handled.
OP here. Is it that he shouldn’t get away with it so i should be upfront? Or because he could get the wrong message? I actually feel it is an easy way to make the point without showing weakness on my part. I’m a bit confused, though, about the best way forward. And a bit annoyed that it’s something that a lot of women have to deal with.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It bothers me as I feel it is condescending, though probably subconsciously. This colleague is one year older than me though always behaves as if he is far older and more experienced than me. He is more senior than me in job title but we currently have the same level of role (he is not my boss and I don't have to answer to him but I have to work with him). He says it to most women but not men. Would you say something? How?
Call him Honey.
And smile
No. For the umpteenth time, this isn’t how this is handled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It bothers me as I feel it is condescending, though probably subconsciously. This colleague is one year older than me though always behaves as if he is far older and more experienced than me. He is more senior than me in job title but we currently have the same level of role (he is not my boss and I don't have to answer to him but I have to work with him). He says it to most women but not men. Would you say something? How?
Call him Honey.
And smile
No. For the umpteenth time, this isn’t how this is handled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It bothers me as I feel it is condescending, though probably subconsciously. This colleague is one year older than me though always behaves as if he is far older and more experienced than me. He is more senior than me in job title but we currently have the same level of role (he is not my boss and I don't have to answer to him but I have to work with him). He says it to most women but not men. Would you say something? How?
Call him Honey.
And smile
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. Yes, I think I may not be complaining if I was called chief or boss. "Dear" seems to re-emphasize a subtle (or not so subtle) assumption he has that he is older, wiser, and more experienced than me, which is extra annoying given that he does virtually nothing and thinks he's smarter than everyone.
One extra thing is that I'm currently having some problems with him so I want to time it in a way that doesn't make him assume I'm picking on everything. I do think that someone needs to let him know that using words like that to women only is saying a lot about how he sees the pecking order.
Thanks for all the advice!
You said before he is senior? Is he more experienced vs you?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Yes, I think I may not be complaining if I was called chief or boss. "Dear" seems to re-emphasize a subtle (or not so subtle) assumption he has that he is older, wiser, and more experienced than me, which is extra annoying given that he does virtually nothing and thinks he's smarter than everyone.
One extra thing is that I'm currently having some problems with him so I want to time it in a way that doesn't make him assume I'm picking on everything. I do think that someone needs to let him know that using words like that to women only is saying a lot about how he sees the pecking order.
Thanks for all the advice!
Anonymous wrote:It bothers me as I feel it is condescending, though probably subconsciously. This colleague is one year older than me though always behaves as if he is far older and more experienced than me. He is more senior than me in job title but we currently have the same level of role (he is not my boss and I don't have to answer to him but I have to work with him). He says it to most women but not men. Would you say something? How?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:“My name is x.”
This.
Anonymous wrote:“My name is x.”