updates: the emotional affair, my boss won’t let me tell coworkers I’m pregnant, and more

Here are four updates from past letter-writers.

1. Someone I had a near-emotional-affair with years ago is about to be my sort-of boss (#2 at the link)

My update almost eight months later is not the most exciting, but a good outcome. Craig has been friendly in the occasional meeting we are in together but we have not spoken one-on-one at all.

Our company is in the midst of a re-org due to budget cuts and we know that one of the VP positions is getting eliminated. Everyone is suspecting that Craig is returning to his original senior technical role but nobody knows yet exactly what’s happening. Personally I’d be very happy if that happens. Now that time has passed, I am less inwardly awkward about the whole thing, but I would rather not have any added weirdness with a boss-adjacent person.

I read some of the comments on the original post and many echoed the idea that I was young, learning professional norms, and to give myself a little grace, which I really appreciated.

2. My boss won’t let me tell coworkers that I’m pregnant

Thank you and the commenters for your warmth, empathy, and humor.

Shortly after I sent this question in, my boss shared that he had hired someone new for the team, and with that I finally got to share my news with my coworkers. The timing was probably a little tight, but a couple of my coworkers knew the new hire from previous work so I think they hit the ground running.

Lucky for the company and for me, my baby was also not born early; in fact she arrived the day before she was due (insert project management joke here). I’m completely focused on her now, and will see what the future holds for my work in a few months.

3. When should I tell my manager that I’m leaving the country? (#4 at the link)

My situation resolved in a relatively drama-free way. As I was anxiously deciding what to do, and when to tell my manager, I ended up getting told I was being laid off with a fairly generous severance package. I let my manager know of my plan to move overseas in the meeting with HR.

Although I was sad to end my time with that company, and was sad for my coworkers (my whole team got cut), the timing worked out basically perfectly for our move and the severance helped with relocation costs. I was feeling very nervous about the impending move, so I decided to take the layoff/severance as my sign from the universe that it was the right thing to do! So far so good.

4. Is this job opening a scam? (#5 at the link)

Long story short: after that initial call, I never heard back from them again.

But after that initial contact, I remained suspicious, and started to do some of my own research. Their site had a page showing their professional certifications, and I reached out to several of them. They were legitimately members of the provincial safety board. One organization I never heard back from. But the organization that is both the major provincial landscaping association and the administrator for interlocking paver certification wrote me back almost immediately, to the tune of, “No, they’re not currently members in good standing, and we’ll reach out to them to see if they’d like to renew their membership.” They still display that logo on their website to this day. They still do not show up in the landscaping association’s member directory.

Another listed certification turned out to be a proprietary business software method rather than an industry credential.

And although this isn’t necessarily damning, I found out that the business owner is a teenager (which may explain the borderline-hostile tone of a lot of the Google Review responses.)

Everything taken together definitely discouraged me from trying to contact them again. A business that misrepresents its credentials to prospective clients is a business that has shown they will deceive people in other ways and I have no interest in working for them or tying my own reputation to them.

what are some enjoyable ways your behavior changed once you decided to leave your job?

A reader writes:

I’d love to discuss this with readers: once you’ve firmly decided to resign from your job at a future point, what are some enjoyable ways that you’ve suddenly felt free to disengage from some of the job’s annoying aspects? While we’re still “in the saddle” so to speak, we all just doggedly endure so many people, rules, and chores. But when we’ve decided to leave, it can free us to act a bit differently! I think it’s informally sometimes called “departure behavior.”

For example, I’m retiring at the end of this year so I’ve simply stopped engaging with Jane, a responsible but petty and aggressive colleague. She has always been a bit of an empire-builder and a self-appointed pot-stirrer about interpersonal issues, and this year that’s been especially toxic because we’ve both been on the Personnel Committee of our university academic department. Well, last week, Jane emailed me requesting to “talk soon” by phone “about a Personnel matter.” And I just deliberately didn’t reply for a day and a half, then sent a falsely “hurried” reply saying “Just seeing this now, and I have zero time until our next full committee meeting; sorry about that and see you then!”

It was just one small but exhilarating self-extrication! What are your own enjoyable examples?

Readers?

I’m being targeted for increasing our health insurance rates, candidates who won’t answer direct questions, and more

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. I’m being targeted for increasing our health insurance rates

My boss approached me about how our insurance rates are going up because of my medication. We don’t have HR. I was told how much my biologic shots cost each month and how that’s affecting our rates. It was also brought up in front of another employee.

Now I am feeling like I’m being targeted at work. I’m being left out of meetings, and any time I bring up new ideas or concerns, I am either dismissed or made out to be the issue. This feels strangely targeted and surprising. I’ve had amazing success and interest in the programs that I am over. I am starting to feel like there is pressure on me to find another job even though my work is above and beyond.

Yes, it sounds very much like you’re being treated this way because of your health care costs, and they want you to leave. That’s illegal under multiple federal laws, including the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, and even HIPAA, all of which make it illegal to retaliate against an employee because of their health care costs.

But legal or not, if your employer wants you to leave, there are a lot of ways they can make your life there very difficult — so you really, really need an employment lawyer to help you navigate this, even if they’re just advising you behind the scenes.

2. I was asked to talk to another volunteer about her attitude

I have been volunteering with an animal welfare organization for about 14 years. Besides animal care, one of my main duties is being at the front desk during our open hours and assisting visitors and adopters when they come in.

We have a newer volunteer, “Margo,” who has been volunteering for the past year or so. Due to physical limitations, she cannot do animal care, so when she is on shift she is also at the front desk.

It can be hard to find volunteers, so Margo was a welcome addition when she first started. There are only a handful of us comfortable staffing the front desk, and she filled in a lot of open shifts. But as time goes on, Margo has rubbed a lot of fellow volunteers the wrong way. There have been complaints about her bossy attitude. She has started stopping in on her days off just to “check in.” One of our other front desk volunteers told me that Margo stopped in and just started doing the front desk duties without even asking her. Margo does not listen to direction from our adoption center manager (who is a bit newer than Margo, so Margo probably thinks she doesn’t know what she’s talking about).

Our adoption center manager (who is paid staff and is supposed to be in charge of the volunteers) asked me to talk to Margo, as a tenured volunteer. How do you tell a volunteer that they are being too bossy and rubbing people the wrong way?

The adoption center manager was wrong to ask you to do that. You’re a peer to Margo, so she isn’t required to listen to you and may figure you’re the one being bossy. Instead, the adoption center manager is the one who needs to do it, since she’s in charge of the volunteers and has the authority and standing to speak to Margo about what needs to change.

As for how she should approach it: straightforwardly! People often feel more awkward about giving feedback to volunteers since they’re not getting paid for their work, but you can’t run an organization effectively without being willing to do it (and if you’re reluctant to, you end up driving off other volunteers who don’t want to work around unaddressed problems). It’s important to ensure volunteers feel appreciated — but not at the expense of never asking them to do anything differently. But again, you’re not the person well positioned to do it, and it’s reasonable for you to go back to the adoption center manager and say, “I thought about this and don’t think I have the standing with Margo to give this feedback. I think it will need to come from you since you manage her and have authority I don’t have.”

3. My boss is trying to crowd out Pride Month

Most of the U.S. knows June is Pride Month, even if they don’t celebrate it. Since last year, my boss has begun painting our front windows in June with “Veteran’s Month” celebration art. I am a veteran and have been/am being asked to provide a picture of me in uniform with a blurb about my service to be played on the screen when you walk in. I managed to blow them off last year as I’m very private at work.

For those who might not know, November is widely celebrated as Veteran’s Month and companies will often give all sorts of discounts then. Everyone generally celebrates November 11th, but that extends to the whole month now through an official designation. By celebrating it in June, I know what my boss is trying to do. I didn’t think it would continue this year, but here we are and now I want to know what paths I might have forward.

Can I even report this to HR? We are in California, but our corporate office is in Texas. I’m worried they won’t care. I am not queer myself, but that shouldn’t matter.

I don’t know that it quite rises to the level of HR unless it’s accompanied by your boss doing other things that seem anti-LGBTQ, but would you be comfortable saying this to him: “As a veteran, I’d be confused if I saw this because Veteran’s Month is always in November. June is Pride Month, so if we want to do something it should be Pride-related or we’ll look like we’re trying to crowd that out, which I know we wouldn’t want.”

And if he ignores that and keeps trying to use a photo of you, be clear that you’re not participating: “June is Pride Month, not Veterans Month, so I’m not comfortable participating.”

4. Candidates who won’t answer interview questions directly

I’ve hit a frustrating wall in my hiring process. I like to run a structured, transparent interview. Every candidate receives the same baseline of information, the same formatted calendar invites with details, and the same five core questions to ensure a fair evaluation.

I set clear expectations from the start: I introduce myself, provide a brief overview of the role, explain that we have five questions to cover, and assure them there is dedicated time for their own questions at the end. I check in and ask if that sounds good. They are always affirmative. These aren’t “gotcha” questions; they are direct, relevant queries about the experience and professional philosophy required for the role.

Despite this clarity, I keep encountering candidates who simply won’t answer the questions. I frequently find myself having to interrupt long-winded, unrelated stories just to restate the original prompt and ask for a direct response.

I work in a people-centered industry, so I appreciate openness and personality, but I refuse to hire on “vibes” alone. My goal is to ensure skills and philosophy are the primary requirements, with personal rapport being a secondary consideration.

How do I handle candidates who dodge straightforward questions without sounding like an interrogator? Is there a way to guide these “storytellers” more effectively, or is an inability to follow a simple interview structure a red flag I should be taking more seriously? Should I rethink my format and my goal of keeping the interview fair and equal? Is there another way to do it?

What portion of candidates are you finding this with? If it’s a majority of them, then I’d think the issue is with your questions — that they need to be more narrowly defined, or that you need to be clearer about exactly what information you’re seeking. Probably that means reworking the initial questions to be clearer, but it’s also fine to interject with, “Let me jump in here — what I’d really like to hear about specifically is X.”

But if most people are answering the questions directly, then it sounds like your questions are working: they are operating as a red flag for candidates who dodge straightforward questions about their experience. Maybe they’re bad communicators or maybe they lack the experience you’re looking for; either way, not giving a straight answer to a straightforward question is a red flag, and it’s fair for you to consider that relevant data as you evaluate them.

I think that because you’re very focused on a transparent and fair process, you’re getting tripped up by “I need their clear answer about X in order to fairly compare their experience with X to other candidates.” But what you’re getting is additional relevant information. Maybe “answers direct questions clearly” isn’t in the matrix you’re currently using to assess people, but for most jobs it should be.

5. Suggesting I consult after I’m rejected for a job

I just had an interview for a job for which I have deep experience in part of what they’re looking for (a technical skill involving specialized equipment), and very little in other parts. I got the sense that the hiring manager was very interested in the things I do know, to the point that I think part of the interview was him picking my brain about how to do something, rather than just assessing my skills.

If I am rejected for not having the other skills, would it be reasonable for me to suggest that I could consult with them for a limited period, possibly to train someone and get their project up and running? I’ve trained colleagues before and it’s something I wouldn’t mind doing (though I would prefer a full-time job!) and my skills are rare enough that they’re not likely to find someone with everything else they want, plus this. Or would it just be weird and out of touch because they would have just rejected me, so obviously they don’t want me working there?

You can make that offer! It’s not weird or out-of-touch to say, “I know you’re moving forward with other candidates for the X role, but if you end up needing someone to consult on Y, I’d love to talk with you about a short-term consulting arrangement to help get the work up and running. If that turns out to be something you might need, please contact me anytime.”

the ice supply, the thank-you note, and other small things that almost took down a company

Last month, we talked about small things that almost took down a company or a person, and here are nine of my favorite stories you shared.

1. The $5,000 thank-you note

I had a friend working as admin staff in a law firm where they lost out on literally millions of dollars in legal fees and a partner was disbarred over an unjustified $5,000 bill to the client.

The firm was representing a client on a high-eight-figure settlement and the legal fees were in the low seven figures, so it was a wildly profitable project for the firm, but greed knows no bounds. After the case wrapped up and the “final bill” went out to the client, she received an additional bill for $5,000 for “post settlement services.” It was really a drop in the bucket for what she had paid so far, but she couldn’t get a clear answer on what the those extra “services” were.

She was so annoyed she complained to the law society over it and the firm finally gave an explanation: all the lawyers on the file, including the partner in charge of her case, billed her 15 minutes of their regular hourly rate to read her thank-you note that she sent after getting the final bill. The law society’s auditor then demanded a detailed list of all their billing rationale and found that at least a quarter of their billings to the client were for dubious at best and totally fraudulent at worst reasons. The firm had to refund that all back, plus pay a huge fine, and the partner was disbarred when it came out that he had been the one directing the firm’s lawyers to bill this way. It also destroyed the credibility of the firm and the other partners went after the disbarred one to recoup the losses.

All over an extra $5,000 bill for reading a thank-you note.

2. The ice supply

A good friend got a job as the business manager for a graduate school department at a major college several years ago. Among her tasks was budgeting and taking care of bills. Shortly after she arrived she noticed that one sub-department had a budget line for $200 a month marked “Ice.” She assumed “Ice” was an acronym (“ICE”) or something college-y and didn’t look into it, as she had bigger fish to fry.

A year later the budget request for “Ice” came in for $240 a month. While a small dollar amount increase, she was asked to look into any increase requests over a certain % increase, so she followed up with the department chair.

Turned out that “Ice” budget was for actual ice. An old professor each week had ice delivered to his office by a local ice manufacturer. So that he could have cocktail parties in his office. With old-school ice cubes. The cost? $50 a week.

When confronted about this, the professor insisted he needed the ice and had been getting it delivered weekly since he got tenure in the 1980s. That’s $2,400 a year, or $50+ grand probably, for something he could get for nothing at the cafeteria or make himself in the office fridge.

Plus, his “cocktail parties” often featured certain attractive under-age undergrads.

The professor decided to retire before the campus ethics board got involved.

3. The eighth grade debate

When I was in the eighth grade, the school’s principal decided he would teach a weekly class of “current events” where the students were asked to bring in newspaper articles and we would discuss them. Since the principal didn’t have a classroom of his own, he used the science teacher’s classroom, which had an office for the science teacher attached.

One day, one of the kids from the class brought in an article about how someone had found “evidence of satanic rituals” in a local park. One of the boys said “Satan, cool!” or something like that, because, well, he was a 13-year-old boy. I’m pretty sure he did it in the voice of Beavis and Butthead. The principal sent him out of the room as punishment.

Our class ERUPTED in accusations of religious intolerance from the principal. We argued and argued, giving him scenario after scenario to determine where his line of religious tolerance was. “Would you admit to this school someone who was of a religion that worshipped the devil?” we asked. “Isn’t it illegal not to?” (We were a private school.) Our interrogations led him to state that he would not admit certain students due to their religion. He kept trying to send us out to recess, but we refused to leave! My class passionately defended the rights of Americans to practice whatever religion they wanted and accused him of practicing discrimination.

As it happens, the science teacher was listening to the entire conversation from his office. Later, I overheard him discussing the incident with another teacher and saying how problematic the conversation was and how he was shocked at the principal’s statements.

About a month later, we received a letter saying that the principal was resigning. I don’t remember exactly what it said, but I do remember my dad saying, “Wow, it sounds like he got canned.”

I’m not 100% sure that the two incidents were related, but also, if they weren’t, it’s quite a coincidence.

4. The misspellings

During my time as a government auditor, the biggest fraud I ever uncovered was a result of inconsistent spelling of a key person’s name in official documents. Think Anderson, Andersen, Andersin. It was annoying me, so I looked for the correct spelling in other documents, which ended up not existing. Which led to a lot of other things.

5. The budget documents

A long-time CFO at my small nonprofit was brought down by a grumpy board member who couldn’t understand why the CFO could not simply provide the reports she wanted to see directly from our financial system. The CFO had been giving the board heavily edited and formatted budget documents for years and, because she and the rest of the leadership team were so well-respected in our small community, no one ever questioned it. Turns out, we were over budget by about $1 million (on a $7 million budget that had basically doubled over the course of three years) and no one realized it. The grumpy board member kept asking questions and the CFO couldn’t cover her tracks any longer, which led to the firing of the CFO, a major restructure, and two CEO transitions over the next 18 months.

We’re okay again but for a while there, our 100+ year old organization was almost brought down by a lack of checks and balances. The grumpy board member chose to step down after her first term and while no one exactly misses her, we owe her a great deal for not putting up with any prevarication during her time with us.

6. The fancy car

A coworker of mine at a former job worked for our state’s department of revenue. He told me about a time when a colleague of his noticed a Very Fancy sports car in the middle of Absolutely Bloody Nowhere, which was not one of those quiet little town that secretly has a Google data center or something. Colleague, a fellow tax agent, found this odd and when he got back to the office cross-checked the registrations of Very Fancy Sports Cars with the people living in Absolutely Bloody Nowhere. Sure enough, they found him, and after a very little research figured out that he’d been defrauding the company he worked for to the scale of millions.

7. The rejected edits

I had a manager that believed he was best writer in the world. Our company had an editing team that wildly disagreed with that and he greatly resented their “overreach” when they edited his reports to clients. He complained and was eventually told he could have staff familiar with his projects review his reports. So he had me do it, bragging the entire time that I wasn’t going to find anything to change.

I looked at it and pretty quickly found some problems, namely that he had taken a report for an entirely different project and done a find and replace for the client’s name. But he hadn’t caught when the client’s name was pluralized, which was almost every page. When I told him this, he was pissed, argued that he was just being efficient, that no one was going to read it that closely anyway, and I was a terrible writer so what did I know. He refused to fix that problem or make any other edits I suggested, and turned it into the client early even because he firmly believed that would make us look good.

The client was the U.S. Air Force.

I wasn’t privy to everything that happened next. But in rapid succession he was let go, we came close to losing all our government contracts, which would have shut down out office, and me and my new boss spent the next six months redoing everything he had previously delivered because we figured out he had been making up data. Data we had on hand! He was so lazy he wasn’t bothering to read my field reports and carefully-made maps in favor of writing stuff that he thought sounded right. It was stressful and a mess and cost the company so much money.

If he’d accepted my edits or better yet kept letting the editing team continue to fix his reports, none of that would have happened.

8. The artwork

At a small marketing agency, our biggest client wanted to use a specific piece of artwork in a national ad campaign. Our principals reached out to the artist, who quoted around $50k in licensing fees. The client balked, but still wanted to use that piece of artwork. The principals decided to commission a much smaller artist for a similar piece for $2500, with our agency retaining all the rights.

The client kept nitpicking and asking for revision after revision, until the commissioned piece was extremely similar to that artwork they really wanted. The new artist expressed multiple concerns about copying, but the principals kept pushing to get to where the client wanted the artwork to be. The ad campaign was published, and the client put out plenty of press releases and social content showcasing the art.

Allllllllll of this communication was done over email, which made the original artists’ lawyers’ jobs extremely easy when they sued our agency and the client for a couple million in copyright infringement a month later. The case eventually settled in the original artist’s favor, and both our agency and our client had to pay out the original licensing cost, plus legal fees, and take down all content featuring the copied artwork. I was one of the few agency employees unlucky enough to survive the layoffs afterward, and the cost-saving measures the owners took in the years after got pretty interesting.

9. The treasurer

15+ years ago, I joined the (volunteer, unpaid) board for a youth performing arts nonprofit. At my first board meeting, I found out that our treasurer was under investigation for stealing up hundreds of thousands of dollars from our organization, his employer, and the booster group at the school where he taught jazz band. (Y’all, this isn’t even the thing that almost brought the org down!) The result was that we were without a treasurer and couldn’t find anyone to do the job on a volunteer basis.

Instead of paying to hire an hourly accountant, the board decided the president (who was a freelance writer for financial publications so of course he’s qualified) would serve as both the president and the treasurer. Safeguards were put in place so that any purchases or withdraws over $500 would require two signatures. This went on for six years without much turmoil. Books were balanced every year, and the president/treasurer was so fiscally conservative we had to fight tooth and nail to buy equipment that should’ve been replaced several years prior, so things seemed fine money-wise.

In year six, we had an actual CPA elected to the board as an at-large member, and in her second year she ran for treasurer. The president-treasurer seemed genuinely elated he no longer had to do both roles after seven years, but that whole next year, he threw up blocker after blocker for her. Things like QuickBooks “couldn’t transfer access” to her or they could never agree on a time to meet at the bank to get her added to our bank accounts. He also insisted that he’d file our taxes so she wouldn’t have to deal with that hassle. For some reason, these things weren’t red flags for the rest of us, partly because he was still around and partly because he was a “nice” guy.

At this point, I’d transitioned out of a board role and into a paid staff role. When the new treasurer started creating paychecks and mileage reimbursements, I told her that my mileage checks were wrong and much higher than normal. The old treasurer been using the IRS standard rate for charities ($0.14 in 2026) instead of the IRS rate for business ($0.72 in 2026) which is what the new treasurer was using. He doubled down on the charity rate being the correct one even though the staff were all paid contractors. The new person was, of course, correct, and this mileage fiasco made her look into more and more of the documents from previous years.

And that’s when we found out he hadn’t filed our taxes in the past seven years, which included the form for our 501(c)3 status. The same status that allowed us to be tax exempt on every purchase we’d made for the past seven years.

The president-treasurer was immediately removed from the board, and the new treasurer and VP started down the nearly two-year road of retaining legal counsel, rectifying our taxes, re-applying for our tax-exempt status, calculating the back taxes we’d owed not just ot the IRS but all the sales tax for seven years, and doing damage control with the member groups we served. As a staff member, I know there were discussions and details I wasn’t privy to, but I do know legal action against him was talked about and then dismissed as an idea.

I’m happy to say that I’ve been involved with the org for almost 20 years now, and we are thriving. We’ve more than doubled in size in that time and finally have a paid executive director, about 30 paid staff members (so the board can actually be a guiding, “volunteer” board), and most importantly — a paid accountant.

the truth about referrals, from someone in tech

A letter from someone in tech, writing about current job advice:

I work at a billion dollar+ publicly traded tech company that is known (incorrectly) for its great culture. People consider this a “dream job” without understanding that it is, in fact, a job like any other at a company just as bad as any other tech company.

All of the job advice out there in this miserable tech market is to network network network, you have to get your resume in front of a person, referrals are the only way in, etc. Which has resulted, for me, in even more requests for referrals from people I barely know. Dozens and dozens.

1. Our referral system requires me to define our relationship, give details about certain desirable qualities you have, and write a paragraph about why you’re a good fit. I can’t do that for someone I don’t know.

2. There is no way to not apply online. You have to apply online. I don’t know any other way to say it. You can ask me to pass along your resume but you still have to apply online. APPLY ONLINE.

3. Two of the last four people I hired applied online. Two were internal mobility. None were referrals.

4. I’m a senior director at this company and have less power than you think. I’ve referred at least 20 people. Fewer than five have even gotten a screening call. (I got a referral once from a C level executive for a spot on my team. We did not hire that person but we did interview them knowing we wouldn’t hire them.)

5. The idea that all recruiting is being done by AI and there are a bunch of magic ATS tricks is … not true. We do initial screening with AI, looking for specific knockout qualifications, but I read every resume (100+ for the last role I hired) forwarded to me by our recruiter. And every cover letter.

6. Because of all of the layoffs, recruiters are spoiled for choice. You can be an incredibly strong candidate and there is still someone who 100% fits a narrow set of criteria and you only 99% fit. You’re still amazing.

Tech is cyclical. Every 5-10 years, we do a “no one needs middle managers!” swing and then 5-10 years later, we go back to “the most important role in tech is actually middle managers” and then we do it all over again. This too shall pass. It was a job seeker’s market in 2020-2021 and now the overhiring is crashing up against the economy and we (workers) have lost our power. 0-1.5% merit increases this year tells you what you need to know.

It’s also the worst I’ve seen the market since I started working in 2006. Which is to say: The people giving you advice usually don’t know what they’re talking about, because this is the worst tech job market in 20 years. They’re making stuff up because they need something to talk about on LinkedIn. And this is why we love AAM.

my newly befriended coworker is a hoarder

A reader writes:

I have gotten friendly with my work colleague over the past year. We have many hobbies in common, including crafting.

We excitedly planned our first craft project at her house, which I’d never been to before. She lives in a very nice neighborhood, and I was stunned upon entering her large four-bedroom house that she seems to be a hoarder. It is piled with stuff everywhere — Christmas decorations piled in a corner in July, books and papers on every flat surface, etc. So as not to hurt her feelings, I stayed and did the craft project with her, but I was so uncomfortable the whole time (1.5 hours) and jammed out of there as quickly as I could.

Unfortunately, this project is a two-step project, so at work she has been asking me when I want to come back to finish! I don’t know what to do. She is very sweet and I don’t want to tell her why I can’t return. She is not in my department, so I only see her 1-2 times per week, but I can’t avoid her forever. I don’t mind being friends at work … I just don’t want to go to her house anymore! HELP!

Anyone who’s been inside a hoarder’s house would understand why you don’t want to go back; it’s not just a little clutter, but an environment that feels truly unclean.

I also understand why you don’t want to be straightforward with her! Hoarding is an extremely sensitive topic and you don’t have the sort of close relationship where it makes sense to take that on.

In theory, you don’t have to give your coworker a reason for why you don’t want to go back to her house. You could simply say you don’t think you’re going to be able to get back to the project. But this is also someone who you want to keep a warm working relationship with, and just abruptly pulling out with no explanation doesn’t sound like the vibe you want. In light of that, here are a few options:

1. Suggest finishing the project somewhere else, like at a coffeeshop. I’m guessing that if this were easy to do you’d have already thought of it, but it’s the simplest way to sidestep the whole thing. You could say, “Would you mind if we finished it somewhere else? I’ve realized I focus better outside of house hangouts.”

2. Your situation has changed and you won’t be able to finish:
* “I’ve gotten weirdly protective of my downtime lately, so I’m trying to keep my weekends simpler. I’m really glad we worked on it together though; I had fun!”
* “I’ve been burning out on crafting so I’m taking a break from it for now. I’m sorry for the timing!”
* Or something else is taking up most of your out-of-work time now, like helping a relative or studying for a class, or you’re overextended so not making any plans.

3. You were allergic to something in her house last time. If she has pets, blame them. Otherwise your allergies could have flared up from anything last time.

Personally, if I wanted to signal that I was still up for a work friendship, I think I’d say: “I’m having major craft burn-out so I don’t think I’ll end up getting back to it — finish it without me if you want to! But want to get lunch one day this week? I’d love to hear more about the X topic you were telling me about.”

my boss always cancels our meetings, a smelly coworker who I don’t know, and more

It’s five answers to five questions. Here we go…

1. My boss always cancels our meetings

My manager is the CEO. They have eight direct reports, plus they are across projects — key clients, key projects.

They’re very busy, of course, but they constantly cancel / decline meetings with me, whether it’s a performance review, a briefing before a client meeting, or our weekly 1:1’s. I feel as though I’m constantly shunted for something else.

I can rationalize some kinds of meetings being canceled, but to what extent should I expect my weekly 1:1 with them be kept? I always thought that these meetings are the holy grail of manager-direct report relationships? Am I being sensitive and unreasonable?

The busier your manager, the more likely this is to happen — and generally you’re expected to just roll with it … and your quality of life will be higher if you choose to do that, rather than taking it personally. Your boss is juggling a zillion different competing priorities, and while your meetings are important, they often won’t be as urgent as other things coming at them.

The big question I have for you is whether these meetings (particularly the performance reviews and weekly one-on-one’s) get rescheduled. If they do, then yeah — this is just part of working for a busy CEO. If they don’t, that’s more of an issue and something you should raise, because you do need time with them in order to do your own job. Occasionally canceling a one-on-one without rescheduling it isn’t a big deal, but generally you should expect them to be rescheduled rather than canceled altogether. If that’s not happening, raise it and ask if there’s a better way to get the time with them you need.

Related:
my boss keeps canceling our meetings

2. A smelly coworker who I don’t know

I’ve read all your articles regarding coworkers/employees with hygiene issues. I have a slightly different problem. I work for a large government agency. As I’m sure you know, remote work has been almost completely ended for federal employees. My job has always been in person, but remote workers have been “assigned” to our building.

We now have random people assigned to sit in cubes mingled in established teams. Someone was assigned to the cube across the aisle from me. He has extremely bad body odor. I’m not sure what I can do to solve the problem since I don’t know him, or anything about him.

I’ve talked to my supervisor, but she doesn’t know what to do either. We don’t have HR in our building, but I could submit an HR ticket. That seems unkind because I think he deserves to have someone talk to him in person.

Is your boss able to figure out who this coworker works for and have a discreet word with the coworker’s boss, requesting that they handle it? If not, submit the HR ticket. You’re not well-positioned to talk to this employee yourself about such an awkward topic, and the set-up means this is the only real option you have. HR can still talk to him in person if they feel that’s the best way to handle it; you’re just alerting them that it’s necessary (and you can do that in a kind and empathetic way).

Related:
my boss told me that I smell

3. Did I make a bad impression when I complained to coworkers?

I just hit one year in an entry-level position at a remote, high-stress marketing start-up. There are definitely some structural issues unique to my position, such as being expected to pivot from project to project without warning and my manager living in another country, which has made getting projects reviewed more difficult. Recently on a work trip, I unintentionally vented some of my frustrations about the way my position has been handled over drinks with a couple coworkers on a different team, who have never mentioned it again — but I can’t help feeling like people are avoiding me.

Friends and family members have assured me that everyone complains a little at work. However, I’m concerned that I’ve now made my reputation as someone ungrateful who disparages their coworkers, especially in a remote position where we don’t often get face-to-face time. How do I remedy this potential social faux pas?

It’s true that most people complain at work now and then, although it’s also true that it’s possible to complain in a way that lands wrong with people (because the complaint seems out of touch, or you seem excessively bitter, or you seem more negative than positive in general, or you seemed to lack judgment in who you vented to or where you did it, or so forth). I can’t tell if that’s the case here, but regardless the best thing you can do is to make a point of being notably helpful, upbeat, and capable in your interactions with those people. That way their most recent interaction with you won’t be the one you’re concerned about and if you did leave them with a weird impression previously, that should help overwrite it (particularly if you then sustain that).

4. Will a sexy Halloween costume cause problems with future jobs?

Last year, I met a guy who is the sweetest person ever. It took a while for me to get comfortable, but now I’m totally in love and very happy. One day he mentioned that he has always wanted to go out for Halloween with a woman dressed in a sexy costume. This year Halloween is on a Saturday and most nightclubs will have a party.

I think a sexy night out in a revealing costume would be a ton of fun, and I’ve picked out two costumes. Both reveal some cleavage and my whole bum.

Where the anxiety kicks in for me is that nightclubs sometimes have photographers and also that other people have phones. I know this fear is irrational but what if someone takes my picture and then a future employer finds said photo and doesn’t want to hire me? I really want to have fun and live my life, but I can’t shake the feeling that I’d be risking future job prospects. At the same time, I don’t want to dress myself based on work. (For context I work in the safety department for a construction company in middle management.)

Should I be worried about an employer finding a photo that someone else took of me? Is it likely that my photo will be taken if I’m just another person in the crowd? If so, do you think I will not get jobs because of my butt showing in the pictures? I really want to do this and have a fun time.

It’s very unlikely that it would affect your chances of getting a future job, but not 100% impossible. There are hiring managers who google candidates and judge them if they find that type of photo. But if a photo of you in the costume does end up online, how likely is it that your name would be attached? I’d think you could solve this whole thing by just not giving out your name (or not giving your real name) to anyone with a camera who happens to ask, unless you are so well-known in your community that people will already know it.

That said, exposing your entire butt is fairly extreme even for a Halloween costume, and if that’s the part making you anxious, you could find plenty of revealing costumes that don’t do that.

5. Should I send thank-you notes after a phone screening?

I have about eight years engineering experience and am currently applying to other jobs in the industry. I get plenty of requests for phone screenings, which is the initial call with someone in HR, who then sends info on to the hiring manager for the second and third rounds. This is generally the point where conversation stops.

I know to send a thank-you email after the meeting the hiring manager. Should I be sending one after the phone call with HR? It felt redundant to me since I end the phone call by thanking them for their time, etc., but I wonder if that’s why I rarely seem to hear back.

It’s good practice to send an email after the HR screening, so yes. But it’s also probably not the reason you’re not hearing back; thank-you notes generally build on an impression you’ve already made, rather than being a make-or-break factor. You should do them because it’s an easy way to strengthen your candidacy (assuming they include something of substance and aren’t literally just a thank-you), but it’s also worth looking at how you’re approaching the phone screens themselves, in case it’s weakness there that’s preventing you from moving forward.

Related:
thank-you notes: they’re not about thanking anyone

can I publish and distribute my own articles about some interesting activities at work?

A reader writes:

Our internal company communications team writes great articles, but mostly informational vs. special interest. They have one of the largest teams in the company, mostly writers, and frankly most people have no idea what half of them do.

Twice now, I have approached this communications team with story ideas that my fellow coworkers and management agree sound compelling and fun about the lesser-known activities at work that are not confidential or sensitive, and twice I’ve been told “pitch us your idea and we’ll see if we have the bandwidth to address it” and then crickets. I even offered both times to write a detailed draft, hold the interviews, take the pictures, etc (having journalism in my background), and to ask that they edit as they see fit.

I’m one of the more senior in terms of years in service, and I’m starting to think I’m just going to do the work myself, write the piece, and then print it out and place it anonymously around our work areas. Note, I would ensure that if this “piece” left the site, there would be zero damaging information for our facility.

Could this backfire in a negative way? There’s nothing I’ve seen nor signed that says I can’t distribute internal communications, especially ones that are vetted and approved by the very people that will be interviewed.

Printing and distributing it anonymously risks reading as a little too much “underground newspaper but about fairly low-stakes things.”

I get that you’re frustrated that they’re not taking your ideas, but they may have good reasons for that (or just higher priorities that they need to write about for political or other reasons). Or they may get a lot of story suggestions from people who say they’ll write the pieces themselves but then don’t follow through, or who underestimate how much work would be involved or what competing priorities this team already has, or who turn in pieces that require a lot of editing, or who knows what. They also might just disagree, rightly or wrongly, that the story ideas fit in with their vision for what they produce.

But if you’re invested in getting the word out about these lesser-known activities, are there other ways to do that? Can you promote them through flyers, an intranet, or Slack channels? If you’re not particularly invested in that and are more just irritated that the other team isn’t using your ideas … well, you could ask them directly! You could say, “I’ve pitched a couple of ideas that I thought were in line with what you write about but they didn’t go anywhere, and I wondered if you can give me any insight into your process — is there a better way for staff to pitch ideas, or were these two just not in sync with your priorities right now, or what can I take away from this so that I’m better aligned with your process in the future?”

should we tell candidates we don’t negotiate job offers?

A reader writes:

My organization has been moving from a wild west approach to a much more structured one when it comes to salary. We have done a pay equity study, identified pay bands for different classifications, and have consistent cost-of-living factors that apply for different cities. In general, I feel way less stressed making compensation decisions in this new framework, as it reduces my anxiety about guessing wrong or not having all the info about fair market compensation.

However, we are also being advised to make firm offers only, with no room for negotiation. That’s for good reasons — to reduce inequities around who negotiates (or negotiates well) and who doesn’t. I support that goal and I understand the rationale. However, I also think that job seekers are increasingly advised to always negotiate, and I think it may turn off good candidates if we demonstrate no interest in meeting them partway. And if our competition isn’t doing this, can we really afford to be the “we don’t negotiate” firm?

The other way to do this would be to under-offer compared to what we’re willing to pay, assuming the candidate will negotiate. That’s nerve-wracking in its own way because they may be turned off by what looks like a lack of understanding of the market, but at least we could go up in response to their negotiation request.

I answer this question — and two others — over at Inc. today, where I’m revisiting letters that have been buried in the archives here from years ago (and sometimes updating/expanding my answers to them). You can read it here.

Other questions I’m answering there today include:

  • My employee got pulled over during a Zoom meeting
  • Employee has a “bugger off” sign on his door

my coworkers keep asking about my weight loss — and it’s not good news

A reader writes:

I have recently lost a significant amount of weight and it’s definitely noticeable. People regularly comment on it in a positive way — “oh my gosh! you look so great” — and similar comments. I know that the comments are well-intended and people mean it as a compliment.

Unfortunately, the weight loss is a result of some health issues that I’m working closely with multiple doctors to figure out. The potential diagnoses range from moderately serious but treatable, to very serious and life-altering. I don’t talk about it with anyone at work because I get emotional and start crying, and I don’t want to do that at work.

My usual response is to just say thank you and move on. Occasionally, someone will ask, “How did you do it?” I’m sure they’re looking for an answer like a specific diet plan or surgery or a shot. The first time it happened, I blurted out, “I’ve been really sick, but I don’t want to talk about it at work.” I started crying and had to walk away. The poor woman was horrified and I was super embarrassed to have caused a scene.

Any suggestions for how to respond to comments ranging from kind and complimentary to prying and nosy?

People really need to think about this more often.

If someone has new haircut or a fun shirt, you can generally assume it was an intentional choice and compliments will be welcome. Weight loss is not that way, and sometimes it is upsetting, stressful, or caused by something bad.

That said, if someone compliments you, I think you’re right to simply say thank you and move on; there’s no point in getting into it at work.

But I also don’t think you should be embarrassed by your response to the coworker who asked how you did it. If nothing else, she is now much less likely to put someone else in the same position in the future. However, these are some other ways you could say it in the future:

* “Nothing I want to get into at work, but it wasn’t intentional.”
* “Well, for me it’s health issues. Nothing I want to get into at work, though.”
* “I’ve been ill.”
* “You couldn’t have known, but it’s a health thing and might not be good news.”
* “You couldn’t have known, but it’s a health issue.”
* “Stress and health problems, mostly!”

All of these reveal more information than you should have to reveal at work. So if you prefer, you could also say something like, “Honestly, it’s my least favorite conversation right now. But how is ___ (subject change)?”

(Also, “how did you do it?” is such a weird reflex for people in this situation! They already know the relatively limited range of possible answers. No one is going to answer with, “I found a box of magic beans behind the building and there are still some there if you want to grab them.”)

I hope your letter will be a PSA reminding people not to assume all weight loss is good news or welcome.