T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1181.1 | | CSCMA::SCHILLER | Back to life...back to reality. | Thu Jul 11 1991 17:56 | 6 |
| Just my opinion, but I feel he's lying by omitting a very important
piece of information about himself secret. He might not have any
questionable intentions but how can he know what her intentions
are? She might just see a single, available guy that she gets along
well with and might try to further the relationship. I have to wonder
why your SO didn't tell her.
|
1181.2 | maybe all his friends are psychic? | TERZA::ZANE | Where are the curious? | Thu Jul 11 1991 17:57 | 32 |
|
I think being engaged, married, involved, whatever, is part of who you
are, so I can't imagine *not* letting someone I cared about know these
things about me in the short term.
Not saying something about yourself (that is significant in *your* own
life) is deceptive.
I don't tell everyone I know that I'm involved, but those people that
matter to me *do* know. I tell them.
I would feel very uncomfortable if my partner had friends of the opposite
gender who did not know we were involved. I would question what our
relationship really meant to him. I would wonder how serious he was
about us, or if he was keeping his options because he wasn't really ready
for a long term commitment. I can handle insecurity (or "give me some
space") stated up front far better than playing games.
Then again, either he doesn't care enough about the two of you (how
important is your relationship in his life anyway?) to mention it to his
friends (whatever gender they are), or he doesn't care enough about his
relationship with her to mention it to her. I believe the latter to be
false from what you've said.
Terza
P.S.-It's also possible that he never really *thought* about it that way,
but it doesn't sound like it from what you've said.
|
1181.3 | It's part of who I am... | KVETCH::paradis | Music, Sex, and Cookies | Thu Jul 11 1991 18:04 | 27 |
| When I am in the process of getting to know someone, many of the important
details of my life just happen to come out in the process (e.g. I'm married,
six cats, no kids, currently renovating a 100-year-old house, etc.). I
think the reason these things happen to come up in conversation is that
each one helps to define me as a person. No single one of them is "ME", but
taken together they help to flesh out the real person behind the face.
> How long after meeting someone of the opposite sex do you make it known
> that you are involved?
It tends to come up sooner rather than later, but I don't go around
greeting new faces with: "Hi, my name is Jim, and I'm married, so don't
get your hopes up!" 8-) 8-) 8-). If it's someone that I have more than
a casual acquaintance with, then the subject will probably come up of its
own accord sometime within the first two or three conversations...
> Would you feel slighted if your SO had a
> "friend" of the opposite sex whom he/she conversated with almost daily
> and they don't even know you exist?
It would bother me only because my wife and I generally share ALL of our
experiences with each other. When one of us get to be friends with someone
(of either sex), one of the first things we want to do is introduce him/her
to the other (we share all sorts of OTHER good things with each other: good
food, good entertainment, good backrubs... why NOT good friends?).
--jim
|
1181.4 | Not telling sounds a bit odd | MINAR::BISHOP | | Thu Jul 11 1991 18:04 | 13 |
| I can see how one's involvement might not come up in the first hour
of conversation, but it's hard to imagine it wouldn't ever get
mentioned over weeks.
I'm married and wear a ring. When I talk to women I don't know, I
often mention my wife so that they can know I'm not out to pick them
up. It's not done crudely ("Hi, I'm married, you know"), but in the
context of the conversation ("Yes, I know that restaurant--my wife and
I went there once").
When I was just "involved", I might have waited longer before
mentioning my girlfriend.
-John Bishop
|
1181.5 | When do I get to meet this neat person you talk about so much? | COBWEB::swalker | Gravity: it's the law | Thu Jul 11 1991 18:33 | 26 |
| I've had it happen that I haven't mentioned my SO to friends, particularly
in cases where I don't talk with the friend much (and when we do talk there's
a lot of catching up to do). In every case, I'm surprised to find out they
don't know.
I find it difficult to imagine talking with someone every day and never once
mentioning him... unless, of course, it was a nosy relative who liked to
pry. ;-)
Hypothetically speaking, I can see myself answering the same thing as your
SO if I were posed a similar question, because I don't feel I should be
*required* to bring the topic up every time I meet someone new. However,
my SO expressed an interest in meeting another of my friends, I would try to
introduce them as soon as possible.
If she's playing a large enough role in his life that they talk daily, and
he refuses to introduce the two of you, you should face the facts: there's
something he doesn't want at least one of you to know.
Frankly, I find your comment ("Does she know you're engaged?") a little
in and of itself. You seem to regard this woman first as a potential rival,
not as a potential friend. This sounds like there may be another problem
between you and your fiance which poses more of a threat to your ongoing
relationship than does his female friend.
Sharon
|
1181.6 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Fri Jul 12 1991 09:17 | 11 |
| I don't mention my SO with friends or acquintences unless I get some
clue that I'm being hit on, or the other person is interested in asking
me out. Otherwise, unless the conversation at hand involves her, I
don't go to any extreme to bring her up. That is unless I'm talking
about some event wherein she had a vital role(like going boating and
having her cause the boat to roll over) Even then I wouldn't say
"My Financee caused the boat to roll, Or Jane, My SO, caused the
boat... I'd say Jane caused the boat to roll over... If the person I'm
talking to asks "Who's Jane?" I'd reply my SO but otherwise...
Skip
|
1181.7 | Hmmmmm. I wonder...
| GEO1::HILTON | oops... | Fri Jul 12 1991 10:43 | 21 |
|
I would suggest you deeply consider your present relationship.
Speaking from direct experience...I did not mention my SO to
a "friend" and I did not mention my "friend" to my SO for a variety
of reasons, all of them deceptive.
Now, a few years and one divorce later I have learned from my mistakes
and have actually changed my attitude and my act. (That took a
lot of work and realization that I too was a "SCUM". I now have
a relation ship with my SO and I tell everyone !! Not just because I
have an SO but because my SO is and will be THE most important person in
my life...
Yes I still have friends of the opposite sex and even have made friends
with my EX. And guess what, MY SO and I even exchange christmas cards
and letters my all. (A side note, my SO has may old college friends of
the opposite sex and in fact we've invited them to a BARBI this coming
weekend...
I'm not sure if I made my point, but
Good Luck
GEO
|
1181.8 | 1181.7 typo | GEO1::HILTON | oops... | Fri Jul 12 1991 11:48 | 8 |
| I meant to say My SO and I (after having made peace and actual friendship
again with my EX ) now exchange letters, calls and christmas cards. I guess
what i'm trying to say is there should be no reason why you and your SO sohuldn't
be able to have friends of either sex and share those friends and relationships
with each other. I think by meeting and learning about each others friends, past
and present, you learn alot about each other.
GEO
|
1181.9 | I'd be concerned ... | VMSDEV::KRIEGER | capt | Fri Jul 12 1991 13:18 | 24 |
|
I married and proud that my wife is my partner. I don't go out of my
way to mention that I am married, but I also wear a ring. I can not
imagine talking to someone every day for several weeks and not have it
come up that I am married. This includes friends and co-workers.
I would be concerned. I agree that there is one of you he does not
want to no something about the other. He's an engaged man - he needs to
make some lifestyle choices - or its going to be a rough road. You may
also need to read the writing on the wall ???
In his partial defense - there could be some very innocent reasons. 1)
He has been single for a long time, never been real serious with
someone and has not made the transition to an "involved" lifestyle ( SO
or married ), 2) He is an individual who partitions pieces of his life
- work, home and friends and does not really mix and match, 3) It just
never crossed his mind to tell this other person.
Personally, I believe that single and "involved/commited" people act
very differently. Your concerns, lifestyle, priorities, etc are different
and wether you say it or not - it comes through what you are...
my 2 cents ... jgk
|
1181.10 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Fri Jul 12 1991 13:47 | 27 |
| This is getting outta hand...
It is not only conceivable but highly possible that it just plain never
came up in conversation. I mean I don't converse with a friend and say
OH BTW I'm engaged now.... like it's been said by others, I tend to
take it for granted that someone would know that. Now, on the other
hand, if the person I'm talking to as a friend happens to walk past
while I'm sitting at lunch with my SO, I'd introduce her as such...
regardless if it is girlfriend, financee, wife, or so...
Something like "Friend, this is my SO, Whatsthename. Whatsthename,
this is my friend, Friend." Establishing right off who is what to me.
IF he were to not do THIS I'd be concerned... but unless you know for a
fact that the conversations they have had start or include something
like "Oh BTW have you gotten engaged lately?" I wouldn't worry about
it. If he's acting like it isn't a big deal... then more then likely
for him, it isn't. If you're really concerned about it, ask him to
have her over for a meal sometime and get introduced... how he
introduces you will tell you more about what he's got going on inside
his head then weather or not he brings you up as a topic of discussion
with someone of the female gender that he considers as nothing more
then a friend...
Like someone else said... if SHE were a HE would it bother you so much?
Skip
|
1181.11 | Both genders are not equal. | ODIXIE::WILSONJ | | Fri Jul 12 1991 14:00 | 9 |
| Re: .10
"If she were a he would it bother me so much?"
He goes out of his way to make sure all of his male friends knows of me
or meets me. If he did the same with his female friends I would not be
bothered, but he gives the impression he wants to keep our relationship
a secret or something with the females.
|
1181.12 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Fri Jul 12 1991 14:06 | 9 |
| In that case, all I can offer, is that my current SO had a similar
problem with her past SO (perhaps a bit more sever) he didn't like to
take her out to social things where other women where going to be
around. How did she handle it?
Well, notice I said her past SO.
Skip
|
1181.13 | Secrets mean trouble | CRUISE::PLINCOURT | | Fri Jul 12 1991 14:31 | 10 |
|
A very close friend of mine carried on with this type of relationship
that you are referring to for about 5+ years. She, IMO, was involved
in one of the most unhealthiest relationships I've ever seen. It
started with him keeping her a secret...it then led to more. She
'was' engaged to him as well...not anymore!
You did say you were engaged to this guy right?
Paula
|
1181.14 | | WMOIS::VAILLANCOURT | | Fri Jul 12 1991 14:53 | 6 |
|
Is it possible he's allowing for the possibility of something "better"
to come along?
|
1181.15 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Fri Jul 12 1991 18:30 | 27 |
|
Re: 0
How many times do you talk to someone and hear them say:
"Well, my girlfriend thinks..."
"Last night, my boyfriend and I..."
If this girl is talking to him on a regular basis
and you have never been mentioned, one of 2
things are happening:
1) You have absolutely no impact in his life.
2) He is actively hiding (by omission) the fact that you
exist.
Do his male friends know about you?
I had a girlfriend that treated me like that. Notice I said HAD.
She would just say "I didn't mention it because it was none of their
business."
As far as I was concerned, if she was unavailable, EVERYONE should
know.
|
1181.16 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Mon Jul 15 1991 09:38 | 45 |
| RE-1
Some feel different then others along those lines.... I DON'T like it
when my SO says thing like "Well Skip thinks..." "My SO feels...."
etc.
To me it's a matter of her forming my thoughts... she doesn't know my
opinion on the matter (even if it's the taste of my favorite beer).
I don't attempt to venture forth with her opinion...
I'm not sayng you're wrong, but I AM saying that there are those of us
who feel it's not correct for someone else to speak for us, and we do
not like it when someone does that. Part of this is a mental hang-over
from my ex who used to give my opinion on things all the time, as well
as my tools, my time, and my skills.
"Honey, I'm going fishing tomorrow with Frank..."
"You can't go fishing tomorrow with Frank, I promised Ed you'd go over
and help him work on his car."
"Oh? I wish you wouldn't do that... oh well, I guess I can reschedule
the fishing trip and take a look at Ed's car.... have you seen my gray
tool box with all my deep sockets in it?"
"Oh I loaned it to george last week to tighten the nut on his wifes
bicycle he said he'd bring it right back."
"Right, well, obviously he didn't... why didn't you call him and remind
him to bring the tools back?"
"Well, they aren't MY tools, and I said YOU'D call if you needed them
back right away."
And so it would go.... eventually leading to a conversation about me
not liking Hamburgers with cheese on them because my Ex would say so..
Only it wsn't a case of me not liking hamburgers with cheese, I just
didn't like the burned hamburgers with cheese she fixed one night long
ago on a barbaque in our back yard....
Get the idea? I don't like people to speak for me... it not only
irrates me, but it's a good step in the direction of miscommunication
and misunderstanding. My current SO doesn't speak on my behalf,
doesn't volunteer my equipment and basically doens't really bring me up
in any conversations unless it's something that will call for a joint
dicision (Why don't you come over for dinner tomorrow? "I'll have to
check with my SO to see what he has planned.")
Skip
|
1181.17 | | IMTDEV::BERRY | Dwight Berry | Mon Jul 15 1991 09:53 | 6 |
| -1
Do you both actually use the term "SO?"
It sounds so.... "PC."
|
1181.18 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Mon Jul 15 1991 10:47 | 7 |
| No but it's eaiser to say SO in lew of all the other terms we DO use,
Boyfriend, Girlfiend, Sweetheart, Honey, Baby-Doll, Puppie-toes,
Lamb-libs, Pumpkin, Dragon-Slayer, Princess, Knight in Shining
Armour...etc. etc. etc. "SO" is only two letters and I don't have to
concentrate on spelling it as hard as I do some of these others.
Skip
|
1181.19 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Mon Jul 15 1991 11:34 | 8 |
|
Re: .16
My point was not that SO's speak for each other or give the
other's opinion, but rather that SO's come up in each other's
conversation invariably.
|
1181.20 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Mon Jul 15 1991 12:26 | 68 |
| But the examples you used, were nothing more then the SO's speaking for
each other. My SO doesn't come up in many conversations unless it's a
conversation dealing with SO's... and aside from this conference and
a few extremely rare situations that just doesn't happen much.
I'm not saying never, it's just that in the way I deal with a
conversation, I don't venture other's opinions, I don't repeat what
someone I know might have said, I don't see how I would bring her up,
we don't make plans for each other when scheduling our free time, we do
check with each other to see if the other wants to take part in
whatever we are planning.
I will admit that her close friends know about me and my close friends
know about her... it can't be helped when you have someone come over
and she's sitting there on the sofa, and if I considered someone a
close friend, then they would know of her somehow I'm sure, but if they
are a close friend and have no knowledge of her, then there is
something wrong in that.
Maybe I'm a bit wierd, most of the folks hear know about my past,
because that's my past... I'm married twice lost a wife and child in
an accident, remarried and divorced with a now 6 year old son. They
know I'm close to the girl I now date, but they don't know that much
about her unless they are a close friend of mine. They don't know much
about Raymond (my son) unless they are a close friend. Simply because
I keep my present life close to me... it's something that's MINE not
someone else's and it's been created and maintained by me to give me
a sanctuary from the rest of the world. A place to go after a hard day
at work. I like to think I'm the same thing to my SO. I don't want to
share that with the rest of the world... why invite intruders into my
own small piece of paradise? Look what those same people have done to
the rest of the world, and there own pieces of paradise. Why should I
let them know about it and give them the opportunity to cause me grief?
Do I make sense here? or am I talking in circles (again).
What I'm saying is that we each create circles around us with ourselves
as a center... each circle contains various degrees of relatives and
friends that are allowed to know us and portaions of us in sweeping
degrees... the closer the circle the more those in it know about us...
the further away the cirlce.. the less those people know of us, much
like a stone in water... there is a point where the circles aren't even
produced anymore.. that point contains those people in the world who've
never known or will be touched by us. WE stack and place everyone on
earth in those circles or rings around us, sometimes shifting and
relocating the people... sometimes allowing them to come in contact
with each other and sometimes not, it's our decision and
responsibility, (this doesn't take into account the occasion cross
meeting of folks when you are not involved).
For instance, I have several friends... on several levels that by
coincidence all happen to work for the same group, same manager, and
even know each other. BUT, only one of these people is close enough to
me to be aware that I know the other two as well.... get the idea?
I don't condone what is happening in the basenote situation...
especially sense she is saying that his male friends on the same level
as the particular female are fully aware of his relationship with her.
That has something wrong in it.
But to state that because a person doesn't know of a relationship there
is something wrong with the relationship is wrong also. But a lot
depends on where HE see's the female friend on the "rings" around
himself and where the base noter sees the female friend... how much
jealousy figures in, and if the guy has given the basenoter any reason
to worry or not.
SKip
|
1181.21 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | in disgrace with fortune | Mon Jul 15 1991 17:06 | 4 |
| Been my experience that most women will let you know they have
a husband/fiancee/boyfriend within the first three minutes of
conversation. Somehow. If you're only interested in single women,
and you _don't_ get the signal within three minutes, proceed ;-)
|
1181.22 | I would have been more reticent if she were less attractive | PENUTS::HNELSON | Hoyt 275-3407 C/RDB/SQL/X/Motif | Mon Jul 15 1991 19:13 | 7 |
| Last summer I spent an afternoon on the beach sans family, in the
company of several mostly-single mostly-strangers. At one point a
discomfittingly attractive woman sat down near me and asked "What's
YOUR story." Falling over myself to establish that I was NOT available,
I told her "Well, I have a wife and three daughters and a house and a
station wagon. I do NOT have a dog, however, definitely no dog." She
laughted good-naturedly and said "I get the picture."
|
1181.23 | she would have to come up in conversation | EN::DROWNS | this has been a recording | Tue Jul 16 1991 15:24 | 9 |
|
Well if they're talking on the phone everyday, wouldn't she ever
ask "what did you do over the weekend?" Wouldn't that be a
natural time to say my fiance and I did X?
Something isn't right.
bonnie
|
1181.24 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Tue Jul 16 1991 15:34 | 11 |
|
Re: .20
Why are you forcing this down a rathole?
I only used two examples and one was of the SO's opinion.
The other was what they did the other night.
If you still don't understand my point, look at replies .21 and .23.
They stated it in a different way.
|
1181.25 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue Jul 16 1991 16:12 | 62 |
| First, I am not forcing it down a rathole.. I'm trying to say that
there is a possiblity that there IS no problem... that some men such
as myself do NOT bring up the SO in conversations and as such the
base noter should not be so quick to worry about it...
That it depends a LOT on what level of friendship the base noter's
boyfriend has with the girl she is talking about.
Next, I was dealing with what YOU had said and how YOU had said it.
If I misread your words then I'm sorry...
If you feel that trying to present possible answers for the MAN's
behavior is wrong, then again, I'm sorry.
My major concern and effort is to show that all the people in hear that
are so quick to say "DUMP HIM SOMETHING'S WRONG" are jumping to that
conclusion without giving the guy the benifit of the doubt. Or
bothering to look at the question from both sides. The basenoter is
seeing the problem from her point and asking if this is normal behavior
or not, and if there are possible explainations for his behavior...
I'm saying yes there are possible explainations and she should look at
those from all angles before breaking off the relationship... I am
making the assumption that the relationship means something to her or
she would have gone ahead and broke the relationship off without asking
for an opinion or advice and being who and what I am I prefere to
advocate that a person look at the decision to bust off eleminate or
otherwise end a relationship from all sides and consider all the angles
before making a decision... better to say "Yeah, when I broke it off
with ----- back then I did the right thing" "Then gee I wonder if I
should have broken off that relationship back then? I wonder where I'd
be now?"
I've had my life plagued with question for a long time and it was
wasted time and energy dwelling on it... If I can present a point of
view, or bit of advice that will prevent that from happening to someone
else then I'm doing what I promised myself I'd do when I finally came
down to reality and realized that people tend to jump first and
question the reprocusions of it later... sometimes much later.
Finally, I assume the moderators keep an eye on this stuff... if I'm
ratholing I'm sure they won't hesitate in letting me know about it.
I think my comments have ALL been of benifit to the original base note
and pointed out some things to be considered by her. If you want my
personal opinion on the whole thing it's this simple... none of us
should be saying stay or go at all... she's given us about a page and
a half report on a relationship that's lasted longer and should
generate a LOT more information to work with. And instead of so many
saying "get rid of him" we should be asking her questions and probing
into the relationship deeper then the surface info of the base note and
her second note in this string. We aren't... we're saying "go" or
"Stay" fine that's what we are doing then I'm going to attempt to make
her take as hard a look as possible at the info being thrown at her so
she can stop and THINK about it.
My PERSONAL opinion and gut reaction is the guy is a bum and not worth
the ink it would take to scratch his name off her Christmas list.
There are a LOT of men who would treat her a lot better and do a lot
more for her... including printing the fact of their relationship in
6 inch letters across the front page of the Globe.
Skip
|
1181.26 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jul 16 1991 17:05 | 22 |
| Re: .25
> There are a LOT of men who would treat her a lot better and do a lot
> more for her... including printing the fact of their relationship in
> 6 inch letters across the front page of the Globe.
Only if they had been abducted from the Kennedy villa by space aliens who
looked like Elvis...
Oh, you meant the BOSTON Globe! Sorry!
Anyway, to the original question, I too would find it very unusual for it
to "not come up" that he was engaged, especially after knowing the woman
for any significant length of time. My suspicion is also that he is
deliberately hiding it. I don't know what you can do about it that won't
further damage your relationship, not that I think it's on all that a solid
ground to begin with. His response to you is pure evasion. Ask yourself
if you're willing to live with this sort of suspicious behavior if you
marry him.
Steve
|
1181.27 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Tue Jul 16 1991 17:32 | 19 |
| Re: .25
Well, now it seems like you got the point. But in your reply
to my response (.15), it seemed more like you were making one of
my examples the point (missing my real point).
So, with that in mind... I disagree with you and stick to my
original response.
Unless I missed YOUR point, you want to give him the benefit of the
doubt. Why?
If one person in a relationship doesn't bring up the other
in daily conversation, what impact does she have on him?
I can see if 2 people are chatting by a bus stop. But he talks to
this other woman every day. And she doesn't know he is unavailable?
|
1181.28 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue Jul 16 1991 17:42 | 22 |
| Re-1
Because as I said before in my replies... I DON'T bring up my SO
everyday in conversation with people here at work, or with close
friends my own feeling is my relationship is none of there business.
I'm NOT hiding it from them, it just plain does not concern them.
I don't allow these people into that circle of people I conceder close
enough to be aware of that relationship. I DO consider some of these
people friends... I go to lunch with them, on occasion I stay after
work and have a drink with some of them... but I don't associate with
them on the level that concerns my relationship with my SO and so I
don't talk about her, I don't bring her up in my conversation. Does it
mean I don't love her? HELL NO! It means it isn't there business.
Steve,...
Whoooops, there I go being non-specific again.. you're right, but I
couldn't think of any other semi large distributed paper around here
unless I refer to the Wall Street Journal.
;-)
Skip
|
1181.29 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Tue Jul 16 1991 17:43 | 14 |
|
Re: .25
Further... I NEVER said "dump him" or anything to that effect.
All I said was if a girlfriend doesn't get mentioned
in daily conversations with the same person (who is of the opposite
sex), he is either interested in her OR his girlfriend doesn't
have much of an impact on his life (not enough to get mentioned,
anyway).
Also, in your last paragraph, you did exactly what you critized
everyone for doing...
|
1181.30 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Tue Jul 16 1991 17:50 | 10 |
|
Re .28
Are you saying that people who know you DON'T know you are married
or otherwise unavailable?
Maybe you don't bring up you SO in every conversation, but do the
people you work with know you have a SO?
|
1181.31 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue Jul 16 1991 17:56 | 8 |
| You're absolutely right.... how observant of you...
I also did not say that YOU had made the comment on dumping him...
However, I will say that by reading between the lines of your comment
it could very easily be taken that way.
Skip
|
1181.32 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Tue Jul 16 1991 18:02 | 13 |
| Re.30
I'm saying that there is a level of friendship where at I do not bring
up my SO I do not mention her because it isn't any of there business.
It is a level that I maintain here with the people I work with.
So in that generality yeap... that's what I'm saying... there are
people who know me or some aspect of me VERY WELL that have no idea
or clue that I have an SO. Simply because It isn't any of there
business and I prefer to keep it that way... not only that but they
are also unaware that I have a 6 year old son.
Skip
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1181.33 | Irony of it all | HELIX::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Wed Jul 17 1991 11:15 | 4 |
| I do not even know you, but NOW I do know that you have an SO and a 6
year old son :-)
- Vikas
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1181.34 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Jul 17 1991 11:52 | 15 |
| A bit of a different situation don't you think? I "established"
my credentials as a parent widower and divorcee as well as nearly 10
years in the Navy and a multitude of other experiences which included
surgury of a brain tumer and the loss of my mother due to cancer....
Lived and went through hell and came back okay several times over in
my lifetime. It's all in here somewhere or other with details, and
all because I felt it necessary for the person I was talking to to
understand that I was talking from experience not my own opinion on
the matter.
So there isn't much irony to it is there? Besides, in reality you
DON'T I could walk up behind you right now and you wouldn't know me...
even if I gave you a full discription of myself.
Skip
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1181.35 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Wed Jul 17 1991 12:33 | 21 |
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Re: .33
I agree with you. I think it's rather strange that I know more about
a person than people who have worked with him for years.
Re: .32
Reading between the lines is something YOU did, not something
I led you to do. I never said for her to dump him or even implied it.
In fact... YOU did when you said that there are plenty of guys that
would treat her better.
Also, you said that we should be asking probing questions into the
situation. Again, I did, YOU didn't.
I asked if his male friends know he is involved with her (to which I
am still awaiting an answer).
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1181.36 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Wed Jul 17 1991 12:44 | 22 |
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Re: .34
O.K., here's the situation: you just came back from a weekend at Maine
with your wife and kid.
You come to work and a co-worker asks : "So, what did you do over
the weekend?"
Do you say: "I went to Maine with my wife and kid."?
or: "Grrr... grumble... Maine... stuff... gotta go."?
All I'm saying is, if the base note's boyfriend talks to this girl
on a daily basis, things like this are just going to come up.
It could be as innocent as "So, what did you do last night?"
or as blunt as "So, how's your love life?"
Maybe, it's different once a person is married for years with kids
(though I wouold think the SO would come up even more), but their
relationship is relatively new and if they have a commitment, it
should be known. What do you think wedding rings are for?
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1181.37 | | CSCMA::PEREIRA | | Wed Jul 17 1991 13:30 | 12 |
| Sounds like you're making assumptions about Skip from the little
bit of information that he gave you. If you didn't know that he
had a SO and a kid you wouldn't be asking him about a wedding ring
would you? Maybe his point is proven in this that he is better
off in some way by not saying anything.
Just an observation.
How about: What did you do this weekend?
>> I went to Maine. Had lots of fun too..you should go there!
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1181.38 | | XCUSME::HOGGE | Dragon Slaying...No Waiting! | Wed Jul 17 1991 14:32 | 37 |
| Thanks Pam you make a good point.
As for the answer to the question you're looking for, If you go back
over the note string I think you'll find she did in fact answer you.
If you go back FURTHER through the string and look at my replies,
I think you'll find that there isn't much more to be said.
In the manner you phrased your question and made your comment it was
easy to read that you disapproved of the situation and that she would
be well off without the man.
In my answer rather then "hint" at my opinion, I gave it full and in
the face. But I also stated that it was ONLY my opinion and that
she should consider other things as well, such as the type of person
I am and how private I tend to be when dealing with co-workers.
Finally I'd like to refer you to my note about various levels of
friendship.
The man in the cube next store walks up to you one day and says
"Hi, are you married? Do you have Kids? What did you do this weekend?
What are you doing next weekend?"
Do you tell him? Or do you try to answer as vague and polite as
possible (not knowing who he is or how he might relate to your job) and
keep as much info to yourself? Or, do you look him in the eye, and
ask him "Why? What business is it of yours?"
I tend to do the latter and if he has a good enough reason to need to
know these things I'll give him as few details as is needed.
Finally, your question on the wedding ring... I dunno, a lot of folks
don't even bother with them anymore. So where does that leave your
question?
Skip
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1181.39 | Granpa's pride | AGOUTL::BELDIN | Pull us together, not apart | Wed Jul 17 1991 15:22 | 6 |
| From an old fogie,
I just show them my granddaughter's photo. That usually makes things
pretty clear.
Dick
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1181.40 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Wed Jul 17 1991 18:05 | 43 |
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Re: .38
O.K., you must be teasing me, now!
The question was just an example of a typical conversation,
NOT the point.
The point is (for the billionth time), that SO's come up in regular
conversation.
Re: .39
As far as wedding rings go:
You're right, not everyone wears one, but
I didn't say "Why do people wear wedding
rings?" I said "What do you think wedding rings are for?"
So, my question IS valid. A wedding ring is a symbol of the couples
unending love. It also is a bond to be shown to the world that they
are no longer available to other potential mates.
Also, I believe you. Even though you have written many things about
your life in this note, I believe that you're co-workers know nothing
about your personel life because 'it is none of their business'.
However, I think what I said in .15 also applies to you.
You are either actively omitting your relationship (you may not be
hiding it just to flirt like the guy mentioned in the base note
may be, but are hiding it just the same)
or your family has no real impact on your life (enough to get mentioned
in your daily routine). Either that or you don't feel your co-workers
are worth opening up that side of yourself.
Either way, someone should feel insulted. And I think the base noter
should also feel insulted.
I understand your point, I just don't agree with it.
As you, I feel I have made myself extremely clear in all my past
replies. So, I hope you understand my point, but (to be honest with
you) at this point, I really don't care if you do or you don't.
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1181.41 | | SWAM2::MASTROMAR_JO | | Wed Jul 17 1991 18:50 | 17 |
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Re: .39
Also, if a guy in the next cubical started asking probing
questions and I didn't know him, sure, I'd tell him to mind his business.
I'm not talking about total strangers (or aquantices) asking
personel questions for no reason. The base noter's fiance talks to this
girl on a regular basis. It's true, I'm just assuming that she is not
a stranger or an aquantence.
And for the last time, I didn't 'hint', say, or otherwise imply
that she should dump him. I did, however, mean to communicate to
her that IN MY OPINION, something is wrong.
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1181.42 | | TJT01::SHIPPING | Sleep all day & Roar at Knight! | Thu Aug 01 1991 09:46 | 40 |
| First, why should the base noter be insulted?
Second, we still don't know much about this guys relationship with the
woman at work. Is she an associate who he has to deal with everyday?
Or is she a true friend that he goes out to lunch with on occasion and
out for drinks with after work once in a while, over to the house for a
game or two on the tube... what?
Third, the point I've been trying to get across is that there is NO
insult intended to anyone when I don't bring up my relationship at
work.
Fourth, I'm trying real hard to show that the attitude of there being
something wrong in the fact that a person does not bring up there
private familey life with every TD&H at work doesn't mean he's hiding
something... it means 1) that person as a certain respect for his
private life and keeps it out of the work space. 2) It is NONE OF
THEIR BUSINESS and I like to keep it that way.
Fifth, (This is on the aside) many cultures do not use wedding rings or
any other formal form of symbolism in the marriage ceremony.
U.S. customs are not practiced world wide. And there are more
ceremonies in the world where the woman wears a ring but the man
doesn't... I don't claim to agree with it (What's good for the Gander
is good for the Goose in my own opinion). But the concept that a man
wears a ring to show he's married is not often so and there is a note
string in here somewhere that deals with men who don't wear rings, in
it there are a lot of different reasons why a man doesn't, and given
certain situations I'd venter a woman wouldn't wear one either. (Such
as working around heavy equipment with your hands... ever have a ring
crushed into the bone? My father nearly lost his finger because of it,
and now has damage to the tendon that will never heal (The scar tissue
that built up over the healed area caused the tendon to "shrink").
Finally... I'm tired of arguments in this note string... so I'm going
to pass on any more comments, obvisously you have your opinion and I
have mine and we aren't going to agree on it. (In other words we're
both stubborn...;-)).
Skip
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1181.43 | | PERFCT::WOOLNER | Photographer is fuzzy, underdeveloped and dense | Thu Aug 01 1991 10:31 | 15 |
| re -.1
> [if] a person does not bring up there private familey life with
> every TD&H at work [it] doesn't mean he's hiding something...
To me, "private family life" is info about family finances, or what
goes on in the bedroom, etc. If you take the stance suggested in the
above quote, after a while you must have to try real hard to avoid
admitting (even to TD&H) that you _have_ a family life. Heck, do you
even have a _life_?! I know, to each his own, but I find it MIGHTY
STRANGE that some of these people won't own up to the existence of
their own SOs/family members. We're not talking about the cut and
color of their underwear, people--just that they EXIST!
Leslie
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1181.44 | work talk for work time | CORREO::BELDIN_R | Pull us together, not apart | Thu Aug 01 1991 10:38 | 12 |
| The real difference may be that one doesn't discuss anything outside of
work without a "relationship of trust" being established. I am not one
for small talk about the weather, sports, plays, or such. What I talk
about with people at work are subjects I know we have in common,
namely, work. _If_ I spend my break or lunch time with someone, then
_maybe_ I'll mention something about my home life, but probably I'll
continue to talk about work related subjects.
On the other hand, there is little risk that anyone would think that I
am "on the make".
Dick
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1181.45 | | TERZA::ZANE | for who you are | Thu Aug 01 1991 12:28 | 6 |
|
Wow, Skip, did you get up on the wrong side of the bed this morning?
Terza
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1181.46 | Why flaunt it? | ESGWST::RDAVIS | Why, THANK you, Thing! | Fri Aug 09 1991 17:42 | 28 |
| Guess I'm more of a minority than I thought....
For the general "involved" case, whether with an acquaintance, friend,
or lover, it's simply that I try to respect other people's privacy.
I'm pretty free and easy about publicizing my own life, but, when
possible, I leave other people out of my stories, or use an anonymous
phrase like "a friend" or a slightly less anonymous phrase like "an
artist friend" or "my roommate". It wasn't until after living with
someone for 3 or 4 years that I started doing the "X says" business.
I probably got into the habit when I was in high-school, when being TOO
open about one's romantic life could rapidly curtail it. But, given
the vagaries of sentiment, lust, and friendship, it seemed like a good
habit to keep -- it just seems like too many opportunities for
embarrassment to the other party. As a result, even my best friends
usually only find out about new "relationships" weeks after they've
started, if at all.
But I've never been engaged or married, partly because I figured the
_point_ of those actions was to lose one's privacy. (Of course, after
8 years, the point was kind of moot, but...) In the particular case of
.0, after two months of daily phone calls with someone that he met
after getting engaged, yeah, this sounds kind of strange... How about
all three of you getting together for dinner some time? That should
set things straight for everyone, or at least make for an interesting
dinner.
Ray
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