Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP. I guess most women would not go out to lunch with a married man alone multiple times unless they had romantic intentions.
This is a shitty, sexist thing to say. If she was male, you wouldn't suspect attraction. You would just assume you were buddies. Women are allowed to engage in friendships with men without having ulterior motives. Maybe you should leave her alone for her own good.
Spare your shitty, judgmental attitude. Outside the issue of him being married, that's the attitude men must have if they ever want to have sex because, unlike women, we don't have the luxury of sitting on our fat little asses and waiting for people to proposition us for sex.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Conversations mostly not about work. She is single, but has BF sorts of. She not too interested in talking about wife, but I always bring up wife, kids, etc. She brings up her dating life sometimes. She is a good person but I don't want to send wrong signals or encourage he in any way.
Anonymous wrote:I'm a happily married man. Over the last year or so I have been going to lunch with a female colleague, 3 to 4 times a year. We are about the same age, in our mid 40s. She is well aware that I'm happily married but does not seem to be bothered by it. Truth is that I do find her attractive but no way I would do anything inappropriate. I enjoy her company and we talk about work, life, etc. I have never cheated on my wife of over 20 years, either emotionally or physically and I don't ever plan to. Do you think it is inappropriate for me to continue having the occasional lunch with her? Also, do you think she may be interested in me romantically even though she is aware about my situation? I would appreciate a lady's perspective on this. If she sees me as a good friend, then it may not be too risky to continue. If not, then probably best to stop. I have not discussed with my wife yet.
Anonymous wrote:Op here. Conversations mostly not about work. She is single, but has BF sorts of. She not too interested in talking about wife, but I always bring up wife, kids, etc. She brings up her dating life sometimes. She is a good person but I don't want to send wrong signals or encourage he in any way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well I'll be the other side. My husband had a co-worker that he saw when he travelled to her city 3-4 times per year. She was always very friendly and welcoming and would bring him lunch, coffee "since you're traveling" kind of thing and keep in touch between trips. No big deal.
Until she showed up at his hotel sauna in a bikini after he mentioned he was going to work out before dinner.
Thankfully he is a nerd and turned around so fast he walked into the glass door and had to regain his balance awkwardly before opening it and walking away.
So you sometimes don't really know what the other person's intentions are, but you can only be in charge of your reactions and intentions.
In hindsight, this woman was overly welcoming and involved since she didn't really deal with him directly and it wasn't her role to have lunch meetings with him, etc.
So a couple things:
Are these work related at all?
Is she single?
Is the conversation more work than social?
Does she try to get you to talk about your wife or talk about her dating life/relationship?
From your questions at the end, it appears you believe a man should not go to lunch with a woman unless she is single and it is work related. And they should not talk about their social lives or his wife. Is that right?
Anonymous wrote:Well I'll be the other side. My husband had a co-worker that he saw when he travelled to her city 3-4 times per year. She was always very friendly and welcoming and would bring him lunch, coffee "since you're traveling" kind of thing and keep in touch between trips. No big deal.
Until she showed up at his hotel sauna in a bikini after he mentioned he was going to work out before dinner.
Thankfully he is a nerd and turned around so fast he walked into the glass door and had to regain his balance awkwardly before opening it and walking away.
So you sometimes don't really know what the other person's intentions are, but you can only be in charge of your reactions and intentions.
In hindsight, this woman was overly welcoming and involved since she didn't really deal with him directly and it wasn't her role to have lunch meetings with him, etc.
So a couple things:
Are these work related at all?
Is she single?
Is the conversation more work than social?
Does she try to get you to talk about your wife or talk about her dating life/relationship?