Seymore Posted January 3 Share Posted January 3 (edited) I have a coworker that I've known for about three years. Long story short, I had feelings for her for a couple years but she got engaged about a year ago, so I just kept it friendly. Over this summer she confessed her feelings for me, knowing I felt the same, and doubts about her engagement since she got to know me. Regardless, we just kept it to texting and sometimes flirting (she would flirt with me pretty heavily). End of summer she just blew me off out of the blue. When I asked about it, she said I would never understand her and we should just keep it to hello and goodbye at work. I was pretty crushed, and it took a month or two to be able to go back to some semblance of normal (insert obligatory don't poop where you eat comment here), although I would always say good morning in general when I entered her department and goodnight when they would leave, either way. After about a month of that, she got snippy with me out loud in front of our coworkers as I walked by, saying with a real snotty attitude: "Um...Good MORNING, Seymore. You never greet ME in the morning". I have zero idea what she meant by that other than maybe I wasn't giving her special attention anymore, because I certainly was saying good morning, just not *specially* to her. I was kind of embarrassed and resentful about how she handled that, so I ended up deleting my Snapchat account, her phone number and any other contact I had with her. Her birthday came around and I made it a point to be nice to her. I brought donuts (as I do with everyone else there), sang to her along with our coworkers, and the next day I asked her how her birthday went. And we talked like coworkers. It seemed like everything was fine. When I would pass her at work, if we made eye contact, I'd just give a friendly smile as I walked by (as I do with everyone else), and she would scowl at me. I just ignored it and figured why not be the bigger person so I kept smiling and she kept scowling. New Years Eve, before I left, I wished her a Happy New Year and she did the same. Now, ever since we came back to work the day after New Years, she walks past me without saying good night - at all. At one point I caught her seeing me coming toward her department and she immediately turned to walk the other direction from me. She kept a bunch of silly little drawings I used to make for her over the last couple of years, and I noticed they're all gone now. I feel like some super petty stuff is going on here that I don't know about, and I'm rolling my eyes inside. This is a woman in her late 30s. I'm not even interested in asking her if she has a problem with me anymore, because I've done my part and been civil. I've come to terms with the fact that we're just going to be coworkers, but this childish stuff is getting a little annoying and hurtful and even making only being coworkers a little difficult - I tried hard to get back to coworker mode with her and now that I feel I have a grasp on things getting back to normal, this happens. I get along great with all of my coworkers but I don't want to ask them if she said anything because I really don't want to drag anyone else into this. Do I just continue to treat her like another coworker, as I've been trying to do? Or should I just say screw it and completely ignore her too? Edited January 3 by Seymore Quote Link to post Share on other sites
MsJayne Posted January 3 Share Posted January 3 My take is that she expected you to fall at her feet, you were supposed to declare undying love when she expressed second thoughts about her engagement, and when you didn't she cracked the darks. When she was discussing her doubts about her fiance you should have taken note of the behaviour more than the words, it's highly inappropriate and tells you that she has no integrity, she's disloyal and disrespectful. Likewise with the flirting with you, this woman has a partner so why was she carrying on like a teenager with a work colleague? For her to start being rude and sulky towards to you within the workplace context is just so out of line and smacks of her bruised ego. My advice is to keep all of her flirty messages in case you ever need evidence of who was driving the inappropriate exchanges, and to be grateful that you never went beyond flirting because she sounds like the type who would accuse you of harassment if you got on the wrong side of her. Just continue to treat her like any other co-worker, be polite, never give her a reason to start knifing you in the back to other colleagues, because she sounds like the type who would do that. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Author Seymore Posted January 3 Author Share Posted January 3 16 minutes ago, MsJayne said: My take is that she expected you to fall at her feet, you were supposed to declare undying love when she expressed second thoughts about her engagement, and when you didn't she cracked the darks. When she was discussing her doubts about her fiance you should have taken note of the behaviour more than the words, it's highly inappropriate and tells you that she has no integrity, she's disloyal and disrespectful. Likewise with the flirting with you, this woman has a partner so why was she carrying on like a teenager with a work colleague? For her to start being rude and sulky towards to you within the workplace context is just so out of line and smacks of her bruised ego. My advice is to keep all of her flirty messages in case you ever need evidence of who was driving the inappropriate exchanges, and to be grateful that you never went beyond flirting because she sounds like the type who would accuse you of harassment if you got on the wrong side of her. Just continue to treat her like any other co-worker, be polite, never give her a reason to start knifing you in the back to other colleagues, because she sounds like the type who would do that. I actually don't have the messages from her, because she requested we move our talking over the summer on to Snapchat. And now what you're saying makes even more sense because Snapchat texts expire after 24 hours. Now things are looking extra shady. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
the searcher Posted January 10 Share Posted January 10 She showed that she was untrustworthy by flirting with you while she was engaged. Maybe she did it when the relationship was strained, like during a fight, for example. Either way, she seemed happy that you had shown interest, which boosted her ego. Be professional, be careful, and prepare for a period of awkwardness between the two of you. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Esteban Posted January 13 Share Posted January 13 She seems toxic and being in a relationship with her would likely be awful, I would keep it to hello, goodbye, and needed work communication. If at some point one of you leaves the current organization, I would cut off all contact with her at this point forever. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Author Seymore Posted March 5 Author Share Posted March 5 Sorry to reopen this but I'm just really frustrated today. This coworker is still ignoring me. Last week I held the door for her, not even an acknowledgement. I said hello once, she mumbled something back, I don't even know what it was. The other day she came in to work while I was talking to her boss. She said "good morning (boss's name)" and walked right past me. She's also done the thing where she sees me coming and turns the other direction a couple more times. A couple of weeks ago she became buddies again with a mutual coworker of ours that I always got along with - she didn't speak to him for about 8 months over a grudge related to some petty stuff. So now I'm careful what I speak to him about and now he's wondering why I'm not overly friendly with him like I used to be. Another close coworker of mine noticed that she would walk past me and not say good night and said "what's her problem?"...well today, that coworker decided to say hi to the problem coworker in front of me and the problem coworker said hi back, very friendly like. Now my close coworker is acting like I'm crazy, saying "see, you have to be nice to her". The other day, I heard a rumor from HR that this coworker accused me of sabotaging her jobs and making them difficult on purpose to stick it to her - this is something that's in a completely different department and I don't even have anything REMOTELY to do with. I feel like I'm being gaslit and I'm going a little crazy today. It really sucks. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Esteban Posted March 9 Share Posted March 9 I think you are letting her get in your head a bit too much. I would just have one conversation with her to ask her why she's like this, very politely, and if it doesn't go anywhere just move on and accept things are how they are. But when you talk to her be very polite and assume she is going to try and use anything you say to screw her later. Many years ago, I had a coworker I fancied once but who I was waiting to break up with her boyfriend. I was on the fence about whether to go for her - assuming she went through with breaking up with her boyfriend as she said she would. One day she came into work and said hello very politely to everyone but me, who she deliberately ignored. She also had a card and went round the office asking everyone to sign it but pointedly very ignored me. I thought this was obvious toxic behavior and I completely lost interest, and stopped paying her attention. I don't like playing games. I didn't let her get in my head (much) after that. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Author Seymore Posted March 12 Author Share Posted March 12 (edited) On 3/8/2025 at 6:58 PM, Esteban said: I think you are letting her get in your head a bit too much. I would just have one conversation with her to ask her why she's like this, very politely, and if it doesn't go anywhere just move on and accept things are how they are. But when you talk to her be very polite and assume she is going to try and use anything you say to screw her later. Many years ago, I had a coworker I fancied once but who I was waiting to break up with her boyfriend. I was on the fence about whether to go for her - assuming she went through with breaking up with her boyfriend as she said she would. One day she came into work and said hello very politely to everyone but me, who she deliberately ignored. She also had a card and went round the office asking everyone to sign it but pointedly very ignored me. I thought this was obvious toxic behavior and I completely lost interest, and stopped paying her attention. I don't like playing games. I didn't let her get in my head (much) after that. I totally agree that I'm letting her in my head too much. The thing is, I'm used to getting along with everyone, and if someone has a problem with me, I am usually still nice to them. I'm always the one with the olive branch even if I did nothing wrong. I get along with every single one of my coworkers, but she has to be an a** to me for who knows what reason. So I feel like I have to fix it, but inside I know that it's not my problem to fix. The thing is - I'm getting sick of responding to rudeness with niceness. That's how I've become a doormat all these years. I teach people that they can act however they wish and I'll just smile and be nice to them. A couple of years ago she did this same thing, too - she thought I said something about her that I never said...and instead of asking me, she refused to speak to me for 3 months (I didn't find out what the problem was until she told me a year later). But during those three months, I sat there chasing her, being nice to her anyway, asking what I did wrong. I look back at myself during that time and am embarrassed with how little self respect I had. I'm not playing that game anymore. If I have a talk with her about it, then I'm caving in to her poor behavior again. Last week she got caught talking bad about another, much younger coworker and the coworker started crying. Just about everyone turned on her. Then two days later she pulled the "I didn't mean it that way" card and they're all friends again. I know for a fact she's full of crap because when we WERE speaking, she'd say nasty stuff about all of them. She has the wool over everyone's eyes and it sickens me. I wish I could just learn to let this stuff go. Edited March 12 by Seymore Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Esteban Posted March 13 Share Posted March 13 I tend to ignore it or still be polite when someone's rude to me once, and then confront it if it happens 2-3 times. Eventually, if it's really bad I'll go on the offensive quite hard (in theory, but in practice has rarely been a need). But maybe that's just me. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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