How to do things right while trying to date a coworker?
I'm based in Western Europe. Relationships among coworkers aren't rare here and I know several couples who met in the office, including bosses who married and had kids with their (former) subordinates.
However, obviously, there are many risks involved. I mean here the risk that you will be seen differently if the news about you dating becomes known or strange rumors. The risks also involve one part feeling pressured into something.
So there's this person I might be interested in. We work in different teams and don't currently interact much, apart from sharing the office space. What is the best way to approach getting to know him better without endangering my stance at work, keeping in mind we don't know each other well enough and I can't be sure if he's interested in me too.
We are both adults, with years of experience and my career is very important to me.
I think it's very much a workplace question, as the whole complexity of the situation is related to the fact we are coworkers.
colleagues employees
New contributor
add a comment |
I'm based in Western Europe. Relationships among coworkers aren't rare here and I know several couples who met in the office, including bosses who married and had kids with their (former) subordinates.
However, obviously, there are many risks involved. I mean here the risk that you will be seen differently if the news about you dating becomes known or strange rumors. The risks also involve one part feeling pressured into something.
So there's this person I might be interested in. We work in different teams and don't currently interact much, apart from sharing the office space. What is the best way to approach getting to know him better without endangering my stance at work, keeping in mind we don't know each other well enough and I can't be sure if he's interested in me too.
We are both adults, with years of experience and my career is very important to me.
I think it's very much a workplace question, as the whole complexity of the situation is related to the fact we are coworkers.
colleagues employees
New contributor
3
All I will say is tread carefully. In any other environment if a person is made to feel uncomfortable, they can escape. But this is his workplace.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
1
Others have expressed valid points - I just wanna say good luck!
– KlaymenDK
yesterday
1
Perhaps you first figure out whether you are really interested in this other person, and whether this other person is interested in you. If you are at the stage of "I might be interested in this other person", it's way, way too early to worry about how it's going to work out on the workplace.
– Abigail
yesterday
As someone who's seen workplace relationships crash and burn several times and the fallout it caused, be very very careful. I hope you get get married and have lots of kids but if your relationship ends badly and depending on how you cope with a breakup, seeing this person daily might take a heavy toll on your mental health. I've seen friends quit their jobs to get away from a bad office romance.
– Xander
12 hours ago
add a comment |
I'm based in Western Europe. Relationships among coworkers aren't rare here and I know several couples who met in the office, including bosses who married and had kids with their (former) subordinates.
However, obviously, there are many risks involved. I mean here the risk that you will be seen differently if the news about you dating becomes known or strange rumors. The risks also involve one part feeling pressured into something.
So there's this person I might be interested in. We work in different teams and don't currently interact much, apart from sharing the office space. What is the best way to approach getting to know him better without endangering my stance at work, keeping in mind we don't know each other well enough and I can't be sure if he's interested in me too.
We are both adults, with years of experience and my career is very important to me.
I think it's very much a workplace question, as the whole complexity of the situation is related to the fact we are coworkers.
colleagues employees
New contributor
I'm based in Western Europe. Relationships among coworkers aren't rare here and I know several couples who met in the office, including bosses who married and had kids with their (former) subordinates.
However, obviously, there are many risks involved. I mean here the risk that you will be seen differently if the news about you dating becomes known or strange rumors. The risks also involve one part feeling pressured into something.
So there's this person I might be interested in. We work in different teams and don't currently interact much, apart from sharing the office space. What is the best way to approach getting to know him better without endangering my stance at work, keeping in mind we don't know each other well enough and I can't be sure if he's interested in me too.
We are both adults, with years of experience and my career is very important to me.
I think it's very much a workplace question, as the whole complexity of the situation is related to the fact we are coworkers.
colleagues employees
colleagues employees
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked yesterday
user525329user525329
361
361
New contributor
New contributor
3
All I will say is tread carefully. In any other environment if a person is made to feel uncomfortable, they can escape. But this is his workplace.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
1
Others have expressed valid points - I just wanna say good luck!
– KlaymenDK
yesterday
1
Perhaps you first figure out whether you are really interested in this other person, and whether this other person is interested in you. If you are at the stage of "I might be interested in this other person", it's way, way too early to worry about how it's going to work out on the workplace.
– Abigail
yesterday
As someone who's seen workplace relationships crash and burn several times and the fallout it caused, be very very careful. I hope you get get married and have lots of kids but if your relationship ends badly and depending on how you cope with a breakup, seeing this person daily might take a heavy toll on your mental health. I've seen friends quit their jobs to get away from a bad office romance.
– Xander
12 hours ago
add a comment |
3
All I will say is tread carefully. In any other environment if a person is made to feel uncomfortable, they can escape. But this is his workplace.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
1
Others have expressed valid points - I just wanna say good luck!
– KlaymenDK
yesterday
1
Perhaps you first figure out whether you are really interested in this other person, and whether this other person is interested in you. If you are at the stage of "I might be interested in this other person", it's way, way too early to worry about how it's going to work out on the workplace.
– Abigail
yesterday
As someone who's seen workplace relationships crash and burn several times and the fallout it caused, be very very careful. I hope you get get married and have lots of kids but if your relationship ends badly and depending on how you cope with a breakup, seeing this person daily might take a heavy toll on your mental health. I've seen friends quit their jobs to get away from a bad office romance.
– Xander
12 hours ago
3
3
All I will say is tread carefully. In any other environment if a person is made to feel uncomfortable, they can escape. But this is his workplace.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
All I will say is tread carefully. In any other environment if a person is made to feel uncomfortable, they can escape. But this is his workplace.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
1
1
Others have expressed valid points - I just wanna say good luck!
– KlaymenDK
yesterday
Others have expressed valid points - I just wanna say good luck!
– KlaymenDK
yesterday
1
1
Perhaps you first figure out whether you are really interested in this other person, and whether this other person is interested in you. If you are at the stage of "I might be interested in this other person", it's way, way too early to worry about how it's going to work out on the workplace.
– Abigail
yesterday
Perhaps you first figure out whether you are really interested in this other person, and whether this other person is interested in you. If you are at the stage of "I might be interested in this other person", it's way, way too early to worry about how it's going to work out on the workplace.
– Abigail
yesterday
As someone who's seen workplace relationships crash and burn several times and the fallout it caused, be very very careful. I hope you get get married and have lots of kids but if your relationship ends badly and depending on how you cope with a breakup, seeing this person daily might take a heavy toll on your mental health. I've seen friends quit their jobs to get away from a bad office romance.
– Xander
12 hours ago
As someone who's seen workplace relationships crash and burn several times and the fallout it caused, be very very careful. I hope you get get married and have lots of kids but if your relationship ends badly and depending on how you cope with a breakup, seeing this person daily might take a heavy toll on your mental health. I've seen friends quit their jobs to get away from a bad office romance.
– Xander
12 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
This is a tricky question. Workplace relationships can end up being very messy if they don't work out, and even more problematic if there is a management relationship, since there's potential for abuse and harassment.
That said, I met my wife in the workplace. We also had another married couple meet in the same company (of only 25 employees) about the same time. We worked together, but were peers rather than in a boss/employee relationship - and we continued to work together for a few years after.
I would suggest being careful, and taking things slowly. Firstly, you need to be sure that the other person is also interested. Suggest to them that you'd like to meet socially after work, and see if they'd be interested in continuing to meet socially. Importantly, make sure you are socially compatible. After that, things will likely develop at their own pace.
Importantly, if the other person doesn't show interest, back off.
As for reactions in the office - you can't really control that. All you can do is continue to be professional with this other person within a professional context. After my wife and I moved from meeting socially to dating, we both spoke to our immediate supervisors with assurances on our professional conduct - there was no problem, though.
2
Just to add: before asking them to meet socially, you should be having regular conversations with them in the office.
– Dukeling
yesterday
add a comment |
Similar to @HorusKol, I can answer as someone who is married to someone whom I met through work. The truth is, you spend a lot of time at work, with your coworkers - and most professional environments have their share of romances. It's nothing to be afraid of, but caution is definitely appropriate.
I'd give you the following advice:
Be sure you understand company policy. Some employers have formal policies stating that relationships must be disclosed; usually with the intent that disclosure would make it clear if there was any favoritism happening. Clearly, you should also make sure the relationship isn't causing favoritism.
Be sure you can separate personal and professional relationships with this person. The office is for work, not courtship. This maybe goes without saying, but if the two of you suddenly start spending every moment at work batting eyes at each other and giggling in the hallway, or planning your next romantic getaway, it's not going to go well.
Be ready for the rumors and gossip. There's really nothing you can do to stop people at the office from talking about your relationship, once people notice. The good news is, as long as you've got nothing to hide, there won't be much to talk about, and gossipers will move on. That is, as long as you're following the above advice about company policy and separating the personal from professional, there won't be anything juicy for people to talk about - at least, nothing different than gossipers would say about any other relationship whether in the workplace or not.
And as a matter of sanity for the two of you,
Keep your social interactions social. It's easy, especially if you know some of the same people in the workplace, to let "date night" turn into "talk about what's going on at the office." My wife and I would occasionally spend an entire date talking about work issues or who's doing what in the office. We quickly realized that was toxic for our developing relationship - we still let each other vent as needed, but we would make sure to balance it out so our relationship wasn't just about the office.
Talk to each other. Communication is important for many reasons in a relationship, make sure the two of you are on the same page about how the relationship is developing, how you're responding to (or not) gossip in the workplace, how or when the relationship is disclosed, how your interactions will change at work (if at all), and so on. Like it or not, there is a "business" aspect to the relationship, so you might as well address it. If you're expecting the two of you are going to eat lunch together every day, but he thinks you're trying to "keep the relationship secret" for whatever reason, there's going to be conflict. So, if/when things start developing, get it out in the open. "Hey, let's eat lunch together" or "I'm not ignoring you at work, but I also don't want to disrupt things or give the wrong impression to my team" or "Hey just so you know, I'm going to let my boss know we're dating" or whatever - saying it ahead of time is better than letting it be a surprise.
add a comment |
I'm going to skip the dating advice, and assume the 2 of you end up together; the other answers seem to cover that part nicely.
I believe that people need their own space and time to be away from their partner and with other people. They also need to be able to go out for lunch with colleagues without stress (both for them and the colleagues).
The only way that I found that this could be done reliably was to get another job - for larger companies you might be able to get away with moving internally so that you don't react on a frequent basis unless you want to; but for small or even medium companies I'd say that just moving company is too easy now to not do.
So, you're going to not answer the question?
– SH7890
7 hours ago
@SH7890 The question of "How to do things right while trying to date a coworker?" you mean? I'm pretty sure I did; "don't work with the person you're dating long term" would be the executive summary.
– UKMonkey
4 hours ago
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
This is a tricky question. Workplace relationships can end up being very messy if they don't work out, and even more problematic if there is a management relationship, since there's potential for abuse and harassment.
That said, I met my wife in the workplace. We also had another married couple meet in the same company (of only 25 employees) about the same time. We worked together, but were peers rather than in a boss/employee relationship - and we continued to work together for a few years after.
I would suggest being careful, and taking things slowly. Firstly, you need to be sure that the other person is also interested. Suggest to them that you'd like to meet socially after work, and see if they'd be interested in continuing to meet socially. Importantly, make sure you are socially compatible. After that, things will likely develop at their own pace.
Importantly, if the other person doesn't show interest, back off.
As for reactions in the office - you can't really control that. All you can do is continue to be professional with this other person within a professional context. After my wife and I moved from meeting socially to dating, we both spoke to our immediate supervisors with assurances on our professional conduct - there was no problem, though.
2
Just to add: before asking them to meet socially, you should be having regular conversations with them in the office.
– Dukeling
yesterday
add a comment |
This is a tricky question. Workplace relationships can end up being very messy if they don't work out, and even more problematic if there is a management relationship, since there's potential for abuse and harassment.
That said, I met my wife in the workplace. We also had another married couple meet in the same company (of only 25 employees) about the same time. We worked together, but were peers rather than in a boss/employee relationship - and we continued to work together for a few years after.
I would suggest being careful, and taking things slowly. Firstly, you need to be sure that the other person is also interested. Suggest to them that you'd like to meet socially after work, and see if they'd be interested in continuing to meet socially. Importantly, make sure you are socially compatible. After that, things will likely develop at their own pace.
Importantly, if the other person doesn't show interest, back off.
As for reactions in the office - you can't really control that. All you can do is continue to be professional with this other person within a professional context. After my wife and I moved from meeting socially to dating, we both spoke to our immediate supervisors with assurances on our professional conduct - there was no problem, though.
2
Just to add: before asking them to meet socially, you should be having regular conversations with them in the office.
– Dukeling
yesterday
add a comment |
This is a tricky question. Workplace relationships can end up being very messy if they don't work out, and even more problematic if there is a management relationship, since there's potential for abuse and harassment.
That said, I met my wife in the workplace. We also had another married couple meet in the same company (of only 25 employees) about the same time. We worked together, but were peers rather than in a boss/employee relationship - and we continued to work together for a few years after.
I would suggest being careful, and taking things slowly. Firstly, you need to be sure that the other person is also interested. Suggest to them that you'd like to meet socially after work, and see if they'd be interested in continuing to meet socially. Importantly, make sure you are socially compatible. After that, things will likely develop at their own pace.
Importantly, if the other person doesn't show interest, back off.
As for reactions in the office - you can't really control that. All you can do is continue to be professional with this other person within a professional context. After my wife and I moved from meeting socially to dating, we both spoke to our immediate supervisors with assurances on our professional conduct - there was no problem, though.
This is a tricky question. Workplace relationships can end up being very messy if they don't work out, and even more problematic if there is a management relationship, since there's potential for abuse and harassment.
That said, I met my wife in the workplace. We also had another married couple meet in the same company (of only 25 employees) about the same time. We worked together, but were peers rather than in a boss/employee relationship - and we continued to work together for a few years after.
I would suggest being careful, and taking things slowly. Firstly, you need to be sure that the other person is also interested. Suggest to them that you'd like to meet socially after work, and see if they'd be interested in continuing to meet socially. Importantly, make sure you are socially compatible. After that, things will likely develop at their own pace.
Importantly, if the other person doesn't show interest, back off.
As for reactions in the office - you can't really control that. All you can do is continue to be professional with this other person within a professional context. After my wife and I moved from meeting socially to dating, we both spoke to our immediate supervisors with assurances on our professional conduct - there was no problem, though.
answered yesterday
HorusKolHorusKol
18k63576
18k63576
2
Just to add: before asking them to meet socially, you should be having regular conversations with them in the office.
– Dukeling
yesterday
add a comment |
2
Just to add: before asking them to meet socially, you should be having regular conversations with them in the office.
– Dukeling
yesterday
2
2
Just to add: before asking them to meet socially, you should be having regular conversations with them in the office.
– Dukeling
yesterday
Just to add: before asking them to meet socially, you should be having regular conversations with them in the office.
– Dukeling
yesterday
add a comment |
Similar to @HorusKol, I can answer as someone who is married to someone whom I met through work. The truth is, you spend a lot of time at work, with your coworkers - and most professional environments have their share of romances. It's nothing to be afraid of, but caution is definitely appropriate.
I'd give you the following advice:
Be sure you understand company policy. Some employers have formal policies stating that relationships must be disclosed; usually with the intent that disclosure would make it clear if there was any favoritism happening. Clearly, you should also make sure the relationship isn't causing favoritism.
Be sure you can separate personal and professional relationships with this person. The office is for work, not courtship. This maybe goes without saying, but if the two of you suddenly start spending every moment at work batting eyes at each other and giggling in the hallway, or planning your next romantic getaway, it's not going to go well.
Be ready for the rumors and gossip. There's really nothing you can do to stop people at the office from talking about your relationship, once people notice. The good news is, as long as you've got nothing to hide, there won't be much to talk about, and gossipers will move on. That is, as long as you're following the above advice about company policy and separating the personal from professional, there won't be anything juicy for people to talk about - at least, nothing different than gossipers would say about any other relationship whether in the workplace or not.
And as a matter of sanity for the two of you,
Keep your social interactions social. It's easy, especially if you know some of the same people in the workplace, to let "date night" turn into "talk about what's going on at the office." My wife and I would occasionally spend an entire date talking about work issues or who's doing what in the office. We quickly realized that was toxic for our developing relationship - we still let each other vent as needed, but we would make sure to balance it out so our relationship wasn't just about the office.
Talk to each other. Communication is important for many reasons in a relationship, make sure the two of you are on the same page about how the relationship is developing, how you're responding to (or not) gossip in the workplace, how or when the relationship is disclosed, how your interactions will change at work (if at all), and so on. Like it or not, there is a "business" aspect to the relationship, so you might as well address it. If you're expecting the two of you are going to eat lunch together every day, but he thinks you're trying to "keep the relationship secret" for whatever reason, there's going to be conflict. So, if/when things start developing, get it out in the open. "Hey, let's eat lunch together" or "I'm not ignoring you at work, but I also don't want to disrupt things or give the wrong impression to my team" or "Hey just so you know, I'm going to let my boss know we're dating" or whatever - saying it ahead of time is better than letting it be a surprise.
add a comment |
Similar to @HorusKol, I can answer as someone who is married to someone whom I met through work. The truth is, you spend a lot of time at work, with your coworkers - and most professional environments have their share of romances. It's nothing to be afraid of, but caution is definitely appropriate.
I'd give you the following advice:
Be sure you understand company policy. Some employers have formal policies stating that relationships must be disclosed; usually with the intent that disclosure would make it clear if there was any favoritism happening. Clearly, you should also make sure the relationship isn't causing favoritism.
Be sure you can separate personal and professional relationships with this person. The office is for work, not courtship. This maybe goes without saying, but if the two of you suddenly start spending every moment at work batting eyes at each other and giggling in the hallway, or planning your next romantic getaway, it's not going to go well.
Be ready for the rumors and gossip. There's really nothing you can do to stop people at the office from talking about your relationship, once people notice. The good news is, as long as you've got nothing to hide, there won't be much to talk about, and gossipers will move on. That is, as long as you're following the above advice about company policy and separating the personal from professional, there won't be anything juicy for people to talk about - at least, nothing different than gossipers would say about any other relationship whether in the workplace or not.
And as a matter of sanity for the two of you,
Keep your social interactions social. It's easy, especially if you know some of the same people in the workplace, to let "date night" turn into "talk about what's going on at the office." My wife and I would occasionally spend an entire date talking about work issues or who's doing what in the office. We quickly realized that was toxic for our developing relationship - we still let each other vent as needed, but we would make sure to balance it out so our relationship wasn't just about the office.
Talk to each other. Communication is important for many reasons in a relationship, make sure the two of you are on the same page about how the relationship is developing, how you're responding to (or not) gossip in the workplace, how or when the relationship is disclosed, how your interactions will change at work (if at all), and so on. Like it or not, there is a "business" aspect to the relationship, so you might as well address it. If you're expecting the two of you are going to eat lunch together every day, but he thinks you're trying to "keep the relationship secret" for whatever reason, there's going to be conflict. So, if/when things start developing, get it out in the open. "Hey, let's eat lunch together" or "I'm not ignoring you at work, but I also don't want to disrupt things or give the wrong impression to my team" or "Hey just so you know, I'm going to let my boss know we're dating" or whatever - saying it ahead of time is better than letting it be a surprise.
add a comment |
Similar to @HorusKol, I can answer as someone who is married to someone whom I met through work. The truth is, you spend a lot of time at work, with your coworkers - and most professional environments have their share of romances. It's nothing to be afraid of, but caution is definitely appropriate.
I'd give you the following advice:
Be sure you understand company policy. Some employers have formal policies stating that relationships must be disclosed; usually with the intent that disclosure would make it clear if there was any favoritism happening. Clearly, you should also make sure the relationship isn't causing favoritism.
Be sure you can separate personal and professional relationships with this person. The office is for work, not courtship. This maybe goes without saying, but if the two of you suddenly start spending every moment at work batting eyes at each other and giggling in the hallway, or planning your next romantic getaway, it's not going to go well.
Be ready for the rumors and gossip. There's really nothing you can do to stop people at the office from talking about your relationship, once people notice. The good news is, as long as you've got nothing to hide, there won't be much to talk about, and gossipers will move on. That is, as long as you're following the above advice about company policy and separating the personal from professional, there won't be anything juicy for people to talk about - at least, nothing different than gossipers would say about any other relationship whether in the workplace or not.
And as a matter of sanity for the two of you,
Keep your social interactions social. It's easy, especially if you know some of the same people in the workplace, to let "date night" turn into "talk about what's going on at the office." My wife and I would occasionally spend an entire date talking about work issues or who's doing what in the office. We quickly realized that was toxic for our developing relationship - we still let each other vent as needed, but we would make sure to balance it out so our relationship wasn't just about the office.
Talk to each other. Communication is important for many reasons in a relationship, make sure the two of you are on the same page about how the relationship is developing, how you're responding to (or not) gossip in the workplace, how or when the relationship is disclosed, how your interactions will change at work (if at all), and so on. Like it or not, there is a "business" aspect to the relationship, so you might as well address it. If you're expecting the two of you are going to eat lunch together every day, but he thinks you're trying to "keep the relationship secret" for whatever reason, there's going to be conflict. So, if/when things start developing, get it out in the open. "Hey, let's eat lunch together" or "I'm not ignoring you at work, but I also don't want to disrupt things or give the wrong impression to my team" or "Hey just so you know, I'm going to let my boss know we're dating" or whatever - saying it ahead of time is better than letting it be a surprise.
Similar to @HorusKol, I can answer as someone who is married to someone whom I met through work. The truth is, you spend a lot of time at work, with your coworkers - and most professional environments have their share of romances. It's nothing to be afraid of, but caution is definitely appropriate.
I'd give you the following advice:
Be sure you understand company policy. Some employers have formal policies stating that relationships must be disclosed; usually with the intent that disclosure would make it clear if there was any favoritism happening. Clearly, you should also make sure the relationship isn't causing favoritism.
Be sure you can separate personal and professional relationships with this person. The office is for work, not courtship. This maybe goes without saying, but if the two of you suddenly start spending every moment at work batting eyes at each other and giggling in the hallway, or planning your next romantic getaway, it's not going to go well.
Be ready for the rumors and gossip. There's really nothing you can do to stop people at the office from talking about your relationship, once people notice. The good news is, as long as you've got nothing to hide, there won't be much to talk about, and gossipers will move on. That is, as long as you're following the above advice about company policy and separating the personal from professional, there won't be anything juicy for people to talk about - at least, nothing different than gossipers would say about any other relationship whether in the workplace or not.
And as a matter of sanity for the two of you,
Keep your social interactions social. It's easy, especially if you know some of the same people in the workplace, to let "date night" turn into "talk about what's going on at the office." My wife and I would occasionally spend an entire date talking about work issues or who's doing what in the office. We quickly realized that was toxic for our developing relationship - we still let each other vent as needed, but we would make sure to balance it out so our relationship wasn't just about the office.
Talk to each other. Communication is important for many reasons in a relationship, make sure the two of you are on the same page about how the relationship is developing, how you're responding to (or not) gossip in the workplace, how or when the relationship is disclosed, how your interactions will change at work (if at all), and so on. Like it or not, there is a "business" aspect to the relationship, so you might as well address it. If you're expecting the two of you are going to eat lunch together every day, but he thinks you're trying to "keep the relationship secret" for whatever reason, there's going to be conflict. So, if/when things start developing, get it out in the open. "Hey, let's eat lunch together" or "I'm not ignoring you at work, but I also don't want to disrupt things or give the wrong impression to my team" or "Hey just so you know, I'm going to let my boss know we're dating" or whatever - saying it ahead of time is better than letting it be a surprise.
answered 14 hours ago
dwizumdwizum
17.6k93556
17.6k93556
add a comment |
add a comment |
I'm going to skip the dating advice, and assume the 2 of you end up together; the other answers seem to cover that part nicely.
I believe that people need their own space and time to be away from their partner and with other people. They also need to be able to go out for lunch with colleagues without stress (both for them and the colleagues).
The only way that I found that this could be done reliably was to get another job - for larger companies you might be able to get away with moving internally so that you don't react on a frequent basis unless you want to; but for small or even medium companies I'd say that just moving company is too easy now to not do.
So, you're going to not answer the question?
– SH7890
7 hours ago
@SH7890 The question of "How to do things right while trying to date a coworker?" you mean? I'm pretty sure I did; "don't work with the person you're dating long term" would be the executive summary.
– UKMonkey
4 hours ago
add a comment |
I'm going to skip the dating advice, and assume the 2 of you end up together; the other answers seem to cover that part nicely.
I believe that people need their own space and time to be away from their partner and with other people. They also need to be able to go out for lunch with colleagues without stress (both for them and the colleagues).
The only way that I found that this could be done reliably was to get another job - for larger companies you might be able to get away with moving internally so that you don't react on a frequent basis unless you want to; but for small or even medium companies I'd say that just moving company is too easy now to not do.
So, you're going to not answer the question?
– SH7890
7 hours ago
@SH7890 The question of "How to do things right while trying to date a coworker?" you mean? I'm pretty sure I did; "don't work with the person you're dating long term" would be the executive summary.
– UKMonkey
4 hours ago
add a comment |
I'm going to skip the dating advice, and assume the 2 of you end up together; the other answers seem to cover that part nicely.
I believe that people need their own space and time to be away from their partner and with other people. They also need to be able to go out for lunch with colleagues without stress (both for them and the colleagues).
The only way that I found that this could be done reliably was to get another job - for larger companies you might be able to get away with moving internally so that you don't react on a frequent basis unless you want to; but for small or even medium companies I'd say that just moving company is too easy now to not do.
I'm going to skip the dating advice, and assume the 2 of you end up together; the other answers seem to cover that part nicely.
I believe that people need their own space and time to be away from their partner and with other people. They also need to be able to go out for lunch with colleagues without stress (both for them and the colleagues).
The only way that I found that this could be done reliably was to get another job - for larger companies you might be able to get away with moving internally so that you don't react on a frequent basis unless you want to; but for small or even medium companies I'd say that just moving company is too easy now to not do.
answered 13 hours ago
UKMonkeyUKMonkey
2,527616
2,527616
So, you're going to not answer the question?
– SH7890
7 hours ago
@SH7890 The question of "How to do things right while trying to date a coworker?" you mean? I'm pretty sure I did; "don't work with the person you're dating long term" would be the executive summary.
– UKMonkey
4 hours ago
add a comment |
So, you're going to not answer the question?
– SH7890
7 hours ago
@SH7890 The question of "How to do things right while trying to date a coworker?" you mean? I'm pretty sure I did; "don't work with the person you're dating long term" would be the executive summary.
– UKMonkey
4 hours ago
So, you're going to not answer the question?
– SH7890
7 hours ago
So, you're going to not answer the question?
– SH7890
7 hours ago
@SH7890 The question of "How to do things right while trying to date a coworker?" you mean? I'm pretty sure I did; "don't work with the person you're dating long term" would be the executive summary.
– UKMonkey
4 hours ago
@SH7890 The question of "How to do things right while trying to date a coworker?" you mean? I'm pretty sure I did; "don't work with the person you're dating long term" would be the executive summary.
– UKMonkey
4 hours ago
add a comment |
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3
All I will say is tread carefully. In any other environment if a person is made to feel uncomfortable, they can escape. But this is his workplace.
– Gregory Currie
yesterday
1
Others have expressed valid points - I just wanna say good luck!
– KlaymenDK
yesterday
1
Perhaps you first figure out whether you are really interested in this other person, and whether this other person is interested in you. If you are at the stage of "I might be interested in this other person", it's way, way too early to worry about how it's going to work out on the workplace.
– Abigail
yesterday
As someone who's seen workplace relationships crash and burn several times and the fallout it caused, be very very careful. I hope you get get married and have lots of kids but if your relationship ends badly and depending on how you cope with a breakup, seeing this person daily might take a heavy toll on your mental health. I've seen friends quit their jobs to get away from a bad office romance.
– Xander
12 hours ago