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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Is this invitation innocent?

118 replies

pooooooooface · 24/07/2014 20:04

Name change for this one.

Just want to get other people's opinions on this because I can be pretty dumb and blind when it comes to this sort of thing.

I know someone through work who I've only met properly once, but I've had to collaborate with him/ask advice by emails a lot. He friended me on Facebook a few months ago too and since then we've been more informal with each other (by 'informal' I don't AT ALL mean 'flirty' - I basically mean that we no longer say things to each other like 'thanks for your time' and 'kind regards' :D). He is very nice, friendly, and a family man - his FB page is covered with family photos, and he seems happily married.

A few months ago he said to me on FB (roughly), 'We should catch up for a drink some time'. I replied with (roughly), 'Yes, would love to'. This wasn't a private message or anything - the exchange took place in a long thread about something else, so loads of other people would have seen it. So, totally public etc.

Nothing was said for a while and then he emailed me about something work-related, in which he also said something like, 'Let me know an evening when you're free in the next couple of months so we can go for drinks/dinner'. I replied with something like, 'Any evening is fine except for days x and y'.

Weeks went by and nothing was mentioned, then in another work-related email, he suggested a couple of evenings and asked if I'd be free on either. I picked one. He replied with 'Great, I'll book a room to stay overnight' (he lives quite far from where he works).

Is this all perfectly reasonable and innocent? Am I signalling something to him by going along? I fear I'm overthinking all this, and it would seem ridiculously prudish not to go on the off-chance that he might be expecting something 'untoward'. It's just that over the course of this communication, he's progressed from suggesting a casual drink, to an evening meet-up involving dinner, then saying he's going to stay over (which is totally sensible given he lives far away, but then why mention it?). He also started putting the odd kiss in his emails, which again could be totally innocent, but ... ? And, in an effort to work all this out, I tried to imagine what he would tell his wife about this night out: 'I'm going to have dinner with a woman from work who I've only met once, and I'll be staying away overnight'. Which is a bit ... well, if I were his wife I'd raise an eyebrow.

But then, on the other hand, if he does have any funny business in mind, he has gone about arranging it in an unbelievably brazen manner (i.e. publicly suggesting it on FB then pursuing it in emails about other topics). And that makes me think that it's more plausible to think that it's innocent than that a seemingly devoted family man would be so brazen ...

Knee-jerk reactions please, people. Am I being a stupid fretting idiot? Or do I need to turn up with a chaperone? (That last bit is only half-joking ... there are colleagues I could ask along without it seeming too weird!)

OP posts:
Lacoba66 · 26/07/2014 23:32

With all due respect poooooface ( enough o's? - not sure). If you were not 100% comfortable with the original request, why are you still pursuing this?

If you feel the need to ask complete strangers, then you're not sure- if you're not sure, then cancel- easy-peasy! It doesn't have to be a big thing.

lavenderhoney · 26/07/2014 23:45

I don't see why he said he was staying overnight. Its irrelevant to you, presumably.

Just write back and say- can you make it a lunch? Suits me better, thanks"

He is hiding his intentions in plain sight. And don't fuel the flames of gossip by asking people at work.

ChangelingToday · 27/07/2014 08:39

I ran this by dh last night to see what he thought and straight away he said yep he's looking for nooky.

WildBillfemale · 27/07/2014 09:46

OP I suppose the other way to look at this is 'What does he have to gain professionally by this meeting?'

Is there a contract or deal to be done? knowledge to exchange? What do you both have to gain in your professional roles with this meeting?

Having been to many many business dinners I know both myself and colleagues consider them a chore, only to be attended if absolutely necessary. Yes the odd one proves to be fun but the fact is we have had to be there in the first place, directed by the higher ups - it wasn't a choice.

ROUNDandROUNDINCIRCILESMORETHA · 27/07/2014 17:40

I think that you are putting yourself at risk
Just because you feel you can't say no-unless you are keen as from your responses i have read so far, you haven't seemed to agree that cancelling or changing plans is a good idea. And keep mmm-ing and rrr-ing.he obviously wants more from you than a drink and even though you have been out with male colleagues before this will end in tears.think of your safety.
Listen to mn they are wise ladies and only want the best for you.

pooooooooface · 01/08/2014 15:55

An update for anyone who is interested: met this guy yesterday evening, and it was completely fine. At no point was there even a sniff of anything inappropriate. We had drinks and dinner and chatted. He's just a very nice and friendly person. I actually feel bad for doubting his motives now!

OP posts:
BitOutOfPractice · 01/08/2014 16:06

Oh OP I was just about to say "this would be a completely normal thing in my line of work" and everybody is gettingtheir knickers rather twisted when you came back to kindly prove me right

People have made a lot of assumptions that you are some kind of inexperienced niaive girl alone in a bewildering world! I'm sure you're not

Glad it went well!

CherryEarrings · 01/08/2014 20:52

OP stated that she was "pretty dumb and blind when it comes to this sort of thing", so posters just believed her.
She asked for knee-jerk reactions and that's what she got. She was always going to go anyway.

oohdaddypig · 01/08/2014 21:27

I'm still mystified by this and have decided I must live on a different planet Grin

A bloke becomes all matey, wants to meet for no particular reason, stays overnight and just wants to chat?!

I'm a cynical old had - but you ain't heard the last of this one!

oohdaddypig · 01/08/2014 21:28

Hag - not had FFS

BitOutOfPractice · 01/08/2014 21:53

It wasn't "for no particular reason". They work together. In many industries it is de rigeur to socialise with colleagues / clients - which the OP has stated is the case in the environment she works in

WaveorCheer · 02/08/2014 06:26

Glad it was all innocent!

daisychain01 · 02/08/2014 06:55

OK it all turned out fine, which is great but it doesnt do any harm to think about the situation as you did and make a conscious decision rather than drift along not seeing potential signs of a problem or a person's motives.

If something feels odd or the pieces don't quite fit together there is often a reason.

LostintheSouthEast · 02/08/2014 10:07

I'm really pleased you had a great evening out poooooface, and added a 'very nice and friendly person' to your circle of friends.

Meerka · 02/08/2014 15:31

glad you had a nice evening :) really nice to hear.

Do think you were wise to consider other motives though. it turned out just fine, but some men might not have been so nice. As it is, great!

unadulterateddad · 06/08/2014 16:05

Glad to hear it all went well Smile

IrianofWay · 06/08/2014 16:07

Ask if his wife is coming along too.

IrianofWay · 06/08/2014 16:08

Read update. Good!

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