Opposite Sex Coworker Social Boundaries

Nurses General Nursing

Published

Recently, I had plans to have a BBQ at my house with several of my ex-coworkers. I suggested the idea to my wife before my employment arrangement changed abruptly and she seem copacetic. Later, my ignorance and inability to comprehend doublespeak was revealed.

Several days before the BBQ my wife become very anxious and irritated when she found out everyone coming was female. This was purely by happenstance. All spouses or significant others were invited but none could attend due to work responsibilities or plans.

Reminding my wife that I'm a middle aged adult male, working in a significantly female dominated world did little to therapeutically defuse the situation. Putting out the fire with gasoline was the effect achieved. She stated, that it's inappropriate and disrespectful to host other females in our home, who I no longer have a working relationship with.

I told her it would provide a bit of closure and continuity for everyone. Direct patient care is like navigating a psycho-physio war zone of emotional chasms and insurmountable summits. No one goes it alone. I wanted to do something nice for my fellow coworkers and aides. To show my appreciation and to recognize the help and solid care they provided. She was not appeased and enlisted the support of her in condemning my actions.

I respect my wife's feelings, 25 years at this would have ended it long ago if it were otherwise. But I have no intention of catering to illogical fear and irrational gender bias. If the situation was reversed, my mindset would not change.

Is this some type of unspoken and overstepped Opposite Sex Coworker Social Boundary infringement I missed?

Specializes in Ortho, CMSRN.

I read the first page of posts, so.. I'm sure someone else echoed this. Who have you committed to live with and stay beside through life with? Your wife, or your co-workers? You ALWAYS side with the spouse, unless they're doing something illegal or immoral. That's just my opinion though... But really, would you jeopardize your marriage over a barbecue with your former co-workers? So not worth it! I'll be honest... I'm pretty understanding, but if my husband worked with a largely female co-worker group and wanted to have a bunch of women to our house, I'd be a bit (more likely, a lot!) weirded out too. Again... side with your spouse. Politely call it off if you both can't come to an agreement. Your co-workers will be just fine.

I don't see anything wrong with your BBQ. You worked with these ladies and you DID invite their spouses. Forgive me but I think your wife is overreacting a tad. Now if you were constantly going out for drinks without your wife knowing or their spouses...different story lol

Oy vey!

Specializes in Med-Tele; ED; ICU.

Personally, I'd call off the event... just not worth it to me.

Sure, I consider your wife's response irrational - and I've faced a few of those myself - but... your ex-colleagues are not really your friends in that it's not likely that you'll be maintaining an ongoing relationship with them and I would personally choose to validate my spouse in a situation like this rather than hang out with some people who are on the periphery of my life.

You've already poured gasoline on the fire... cut your losses and don't follow that up with some rocket fuel.

Really, is this BBQ the hill you want to die on?

All the comments about trust issues and marital counseling are right on.

Good luck to you, friend.

Damn, I was shooting for sarcasm. Probably just a misplaced remnant of hyperbole left over from my passive-aggressive assimilation into nursing culture.

As you seem to be well read...or at least try to come off that way, how could you confuse sarcasm with pretentiousness? Yes, you are coming off very pretentious. You came to a group of strangers and called your wife's feelings irrational with no empathy for her feelings. I think my husband's jealous feelings are sometimes irrational, but I empathize with him because the feeling of jealousy sucks. Your partner needs empathy and reassurance. If it's an ongoing issue, then you go to counseling. You don't have to take obnoxious behavior in the meantime, but there's a better way of dealing with it instead of dismissing her feelings. You should care about your wife's feelings. Irrational or not. And help her get help if it's a mental health issue.

The problem isn't with professional boundaries. The problem seems to be your lack of respect for your wife. You have dismissed her feelings as "illogical fear and irrational gender bias." That looks a lot like gaslighting to me.

This! I couldn't agree more. I don't tend to judge people I don't know, and especially when I don't know the other person's side of the story...but this screams gaslighting. It is abuse plain and simple. So many red flags here of OP. I'm sorry to say it, OP. I do really hope we are misunderstanding you, but I doubt it.

I told her it would provide a bit of closure and continuity for everyone.

I have had some great coworkers, but I can honestly say I've never needed "closure" after any of them quit.

Glad to see that you canceled the BBQ out of respect for your wife's feelings. Hopefully, the two of you can get to the bottom of your issues and move forward with mutual respect. Counseling still might be a good idea lest resentments about this incident fester.

cyc0sys,

How did your wife respond to the party cancellation news?

sounds like she has trust problems

sounds like she has trust problems

Then again we are only hearing his side of the story here. There is so much we don't know here.

Specializes in Emergency, Telemetry, Transplant.
Really, is this BBQ the hill you want to die on?

Is that next to Pork Chop Hill?

Battle of Pork Chop Hill - Wikipedia

Specializes in Med-Tele; ED; ICU.

Really, is this BBQ the hill you want to die on?

Is that next to Pork Chop Hill?

Battle of Pork Chop Hill - Wikipedia

Hamburger Hill...

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