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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

situation with my colleague

978 replies

MortalEnemy · 21/09/2017 19:05

Let me start by saying that I am over 40, but if I sound like the most clueless of teenagers, that is because I am in relationships terms -- I was with the same man from my teens until a couple of years ago, and as I've been single since, and am the busy working parent of a demanding small child with no evening childcare, as a result I have pretty much zero experience of relationships, flirting etc.

Which is why I'm finding this confusing and talking to a bunch of strangers on the internet about it.

I've been in my current job at a large organisation (being deliberately vague) for just over a year. Over the last two or three months, I've found myself feeling close to a colleague from another department with whom I have intermittent meetings/dealings, after only vaguely registering him as a nice guy before that. Recently we seem to end up drifting together at any events we're both at, and falling into conversations which end up often being very long and wide-ranging, and often end up hovering by the lifts or in the corridor talking more, if it's something at the end of the day.

I thought I was overthinking this while I was away over the summer, but now it seems to be becoming more frequent, if anything, and the conversations more personal. It's a busy period at work, with a weekend event and a conference we both had to attend, and in the last five workdays alone, we must have spent four or five hours talking at a reception/on the way out of the building/on the way to the car park. I'm finding myself thinking about him more and more, and realised I find him attractive. He's 48, clever, funny, observant, and kind, and apparently amiably divorced, but clearly a besotted and very involved father to teenagers.

The issue, I suppose is that I'm completely confused about what this means. The last time I was in this situation I was 18, pretty and confident, and I was falling in love with the man I married. Now I am in my 40s, no looker, and my confidence has taken a big knocking for various reasons in the last five years, when I found parenthood tough, my career foundered, my marriage ended and I haven't been particularly happy -- my marriage was celibate for the last few years, and I have not thought of myself as someone who could be considered attractive for a very long time. I also have none of the basic comprehension of men that an average, single 40something woman has. At some level I am terrified, but mostly what I feel is as though I'm a beginner at a language everyone else seems to speak fluently.

How on earth do you know if someone reciprocates your feelings? How can you tell the difference between someone who likes you as a workmate and someone who is developing stronger feelings for you? I have butterflies. I'm off my food. When someone says his name I get a rush of pleasure. I am a teenager in the body of a 42 year old professional.

I realise this probably sounds like a complete non-problem to anyone with experience of adult dating, but despite being a functioning adult I am absolutely unable to conceive that anyone would find me attractive, and while we gravitate to one another when we encounter one another at work and can't stop talking, it's always 'accidental'. He's very self-deprecating, and I sense he's been out of the game for a while, too. I'm especially wary because presuming something about a workmate could have horrible consequences. Also, we're both originally from the same country, though have lived in the UK most of our adult lives, so I wonder whether this might just be nostalgia for 'home' from him. But then I think of all the times when an hour suddenly melted away just standing in the corridor, and the fact that he remembers absolutely everything I tell him.

Thank you for struggling through this any advice? How does this sound to you? What would you do? A bit of me hopes you will all say 'predictable office crush all in your head no basis in reality, no need to do anything'.

OP posts:
SweetCrustPastry · 12/10/2017 02:08

Ooh - I've just read this and you sound really lovely. I do hope he is too and is revving up to brave Flowers

UkuleleRose · 12/10/2017 07:25

EEEEEK! This sounds very promising, OP!

I especially love that he was rumpling his hair - IIRC, that's body language talk for attraction, i.e, he's grooming himself.

badbadhusky · 12/10/2017 08:11

Yes, tentative progress - lovely update OP. The silk dress sounded lovely too.

NoSquirrels · 12/10/2017 09:05

Ooh Grin Fingers crossed he'll get the courage for the dangerous coffee...

Next time he comes in, say 'Oh, I was just about to grab a coffee - do you want to walk & talk?'

MargoLovebutter · 12/10/2017 09:06

Hurrah! Silk dress sounds great & him rumpling his hair sounds great too. I bet you feel like you'll combust!!!!!!

Saffronwblue · 12/10/2017 10:04

So much for being in a different part of the building and no need to ever see each other again.
Love to think of him racking his brains for an excuse to speak.

JustWonderingZ · 12/10/2017 10:56

OP, this is so exciting totally over-invested. If it was me I would be getting close to him now, standing very close to him while chatting, coming right up to him to ask something, i.e. generally enter his personal space with intent Grin. See how long he can take it for. Easter Smile

Careless Dad WAS right then about the photocopier room.

Please feel free to ignore my post as you two may work differently. But I have always found you can tell a lot by the personal distance: a bloke who is attracted to you will naturally gravitate towards you and stand closer than you would ordinarily. Indeed, very close sometimes. Big giveaway for me. Also the eyes just open up, get wider, did you notice? you are probably doing it tooWink

3perfectweemen · 12/10/2017 11:32

Following Grin never doubted he liked you. Sounds promising.

FusionChefGeoff · 12/10/2017 12:01

Ooooh - just RTFT and am intrigued. Definitely meant ‘that would be dangerous’ in a ‘I would fall madly in love with you but I cant’ way - so what about his situation means that?? Is it the being colleagues thing?? My DH and I met at work.

NK1cf53daaX127805d4fd5 · 12/10/2017 12:17

Loving this update

LunchBoxPolice · 12/10/2017 12:25

He likesssss youuuuu!

CandyMelts · 12/10/2017 12:48

I like this thread! I have my fingers crossed

KissesAX · 12/10/2017 13:05

I can see the wedding speeches now about long drawn out, meetings in the corridor both too nervous to confess feelings 😂

diege · 12/10/2017 13:28

This takes me back a year ago to when I flirted with a colleague. Took ages for him to get the hint and make a move but got there in the end. Got together and still going strong!

loveisasecondhandemotion · 12/10/2017 13:40

Just read the full thread and forgot about hoovering the stairs and it's clear as day that he fancies you op.

Otherwise, why would it be dangerous??

I don't drink coffee so I don't know the poison content Grin but am sure one cup won't kill you.

He's scared I think and is probably acting out the male version of you at the moment:

Is he making more effort with clothes? New aftershave? Joined a gym? Etc etc.

This is so going to happen.....

gustofwind · 12/10/2017 14:06

I have high hopes for this one OP.

I love a love story!

Flowers
badbadhusky · 12/10/2017 16:44

Steady on. We're only talk lust and like at this stage.

OP - hope your gentleman caller has found time to swing by your office today. Wink

MarthasHarbour · 12/10/2017 17:07

Parking up as I have just stumbled across this thread and I don't MUST know how this ends up!

Oh and OP - he is totally into you!! Wink

guilty100 · 12/10/2017 17:17

I just wanted to say: I met my DH in very similar circumstances.

I want to applaud you for taking some initiative because I think as a woman you have to do the asking these days. Any decent guy is going to have a part of his head worried that he's going to come across as some kind of work sleaze, create a situation in the office that is unpleasant, or be gossiped about as/when the relationship starts. It's important to send signals that this is very much... consensual, for want of a better word. And the best signal is just being able to say "Would you like to go for a drink sometime?"

AuntyElle · 12/10/2017 23:26

Oh, Mortal, I've just disciveeed this thread - it is wonderful!
I would rather he had acknowledged his borderline rudeness (even in a brief email) but still... Wink

But did you really type the following with a straight face?
"I did manage to pull off one thing to my own satisfaction..." Smile

AuntyElle · 12/10/2017 23:30

Also thank you to Justonemorelatte and UkeleleRose for such insightful and wise discussions about workplace relationships. Really enlightening.

ToHisMistress · 13/10/2017 05:54

Guilty 100 is right... if he's any sort of decent chap he's surely considering the implications of his intentions being misinterpreted or misplaced and the potential consequences in the workplace (which is such a sad state of (ahem) affairs isn't it?).

You're going to have to be the one to spell it out again OP! Grin

AuntyElle · 13/10/2017 10:16

Sorry, Mortal, I didn't mean that it was wonderful that you have been through uncertainty and angst over this. Blush But everything else!

Foundwantingalways · 13/10/2017 10:49

I absolutely love this thread! OP you sound wonderful and the MN collective are wise, witty and very good company Wine

macnab · 13/10/2017 10:55

This is good news for all of us that are over invested in this thread Grin

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