Anonymous wrote:What is the difference between work husband/wife and work friend? Is there an additional element that goes beyond work friendships?
Anonymous wrote:Hm. I don’t think you are being unreasonable. Not comparing your partner to other people is Relationships 101.
My DH had a female colleague who developed feelings for him and tried to incite him into an affair. I only know this because her mother confronted me about it at a company party. She would stare at me in a rude way the two times I remember meeting her. DH said she never spoke to him about it. The only reason I believe him is because her mother told me he had turned down her daughter’s ‘signals’ and insulted me as to why.
The female coworker left the company after that. DH got a new job after I told him I didn’t want him working for this family’s business if he wanted to stay married.
And before random people flame me for this, he got a higher paying, better job that he likes more overall, so I wasn’t being controlling. Toxic work environments are not good for careers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They sound close and are beginning to share personal details of their lives. Emotional affairs are budding.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Coffee is work-fuel, so that is OK.
Anything that is his body, your body or the kids' bodies is off limits. That is the boundary.
So no talking about your kid’s eczema? That’s crazy by the way.
Right? I want to know how the eczema came up in conversation.
I come from a family with ezcema sufferers. There is absolutely nothing emotional about it. It’s a painful unsightly nuisance and we are always on the hunt for good options. It’s like a skin allergy. It is emotional and boundary crossing to say you have DC spring allergies?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
That’s the solution! OP starts calling them his Work Daughters. That will creep him right out.
The reason these relationships seem threatening is because we give them weird names. The word for a person you like, who knows some personal things about you is a "friend" in any other context. OP's husband has two "work friends."
Anonymous wrote:They sound close and are beginning to share personal details of their lives. Emotional affairs are budding.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Coffee is work-fuel, so that is OK.
Anything that is his body, your body or the kids' bodies is off limits. That is the boundary.
So no talking about your kid’s eczema? That’s crazy by the way.
Right? I want to know how the eczema came up in conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Coffee is work-fuel, so that is OK.
Anything that is his body, your body or the kids' bodies is off limits. That is the boundary.
So no talking about your kid’s eczema? That’s crazy by the way.
Right? I want to know how the eczema came up in conversation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Coffee is work-fuel, so that is OK.
Anything that is his body, your body or the kids' bodies is off limits. That is the boundary.
So no talking about your kid’s eczema? That’s crazy by the way.
Right? I want to know how the eczema came up in conversation.