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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

My boss doesn't treat me like a human being

115 replies

fcukedinthehead · 01/01/2020 15:44

I work for a very large global company. I am a direct report and “favourite” of the big boss and I’ve had a breakdown this Christmas over my treatment and I am looking for solutions to cope which are not just plan to leave as I am already planning to leave at the end of this year.

For the past 10 years I have been absolutely dedicated to my job, day and night. I have sacrificed time with my DC, friendships, compromised my relationship with DH, have become ill, been completely sleep deprived and finally had a breakdown.

Here are some examples of his behaviour from most recent:

My mother died just before Christmas (23rd Dec.) I have a meeting booked on the day of her funeral (8th Jan.) Due to religious custom and my own values, this cannot be moved. Boss would not let me move or miss the meeting. Did not acknowledge my mother’s death. Did not say he was sorry she died. When I insisted that I was going to her funeral and not to the (barely important) meeting, he stopped speaking to me and cut me off. When I sent him a text last night saying “happy new year,” trying to make things better, he replied “fuck off.” This is especially hurtful when I was asked emphatically, with tears in his eyes, by him (back when I was lower down in the company) to immediately get his EA to send an enormous bunch of flowers to another colleague whose mother had just died and for me to call her and tell her to “take as much time” as she needed.

He is either contacting me all the time (up to 50 missed calls a day, or calling via reception and multiple and withheld numbers to get me if I do not pick up on my mobile,) or completely ignoring me and “favouring” other colleagues to punish me.

Whoever is the “favourite” of the moment gets all the perks: payrises, status in the company (having his “ear” is seen as a sign of status), introductions, favours – eg getting to sit next to somebody important at a dinner, presents, getting taken out for meals. I am his favourite and have been his favourite for most of the ten years I have been at the company. It has meant I have received the best and worst treatment by him. It has meant that his expectations of me are high and beyond humane. I cannot get away with an off day or a sick day or a bereavement day. He will tell me if he thinks I look “terrible” if he doesn’t like what I am wearing and I should go home and change (he likes black and white and doesn’t like colours) he will tell me if I’ve gained or lost weight (he approves of slimness, not weight gain.) In return I have been paid well, been his confidante, know much more than I should do about the company and the people and about the business that we do. If obstacles in my life have been obstacles that directly affect him that I am prepared to move (eg DH booking a holiday when boss needed me around,) he has personally paid for DH, the DC and I to fly out first class three days later, or given us his private jet to get about. Money has never been an issue.

He lives between a big estate in the countryside and a townhouse in New York, but stays in London 2-3 nights a week. 2-3 of those evenings, in New York or London, unless he gets a better offer, he asks me to find “the latest place” to go for dinner and wants me there to eat with him and then walk him to his hotel. Most days I work from 6am-7pm, go home, put the children to bed and I’m back out by 9pm for dinner with the boss (and perhaps a client or a customer) and home at midnight. At dinner he likes to talk about himself, as you would expect. Other weeks we are in New York and I am completely at his beck and call and like a member of his house staff. When we are together, we rehash anecdotes of meetings we have been to together where he impressed someone or won business, or he goes through his phone and shows me messages people have sent him saying things like “you’re great,” or “you’re the best,” or “no-one can do it like you.” He especially likes when I talk to colleagues lower down in the company and tell him positive things they have said about him, eg “the boss is so talented, he’s such a good person, he did this small thing for me which just helped me so much. He is so charitable. He can talk to people on all levels."

As his "favourite," I get all the work. I also get a large team to delegate it to, but as it is so much work, we all become extremely overwhelmed and overworked, and as I am actually a good boss myself, when my team have boundaries with me, I respect them. Which means, at the end of the day, I end up doing half of this work myself. If I come close to missing one deadline (which I never have,) if I show any sign of distraction, tiredness, ingratitude or lack of interest, I get punished, all the work gets taken away and I have to grovel and apologise to get it back. And then I get all the work again, not just a proportion of it that I can manage.

Sometimes he will fly off the handle for no reason and stop speaking to me. We have been in cars together where he has suddenly told me to “piss off” and never speak to him again and got out and walked off or told me to get out and find my own way home. Or restaurants where he has stood up and left the table and marched out, slammed doors in my face, . What pisses him off is always along the same theme: usually if I have approached him or responded however subtlely to criticise him or offer him any kind of constructive feedback or to pass on a difficult message or to say he has hurt me or that I didn’t feel something was right, I get an immediate response of him flying off the handle. How dare I hurt him so much? How dare I criticise him when I know nothing and I’d be nothing if it were not for him? Days later, after the public punishment of ignoring, withdrawing of work and attention, having to do humiliating “handovers” to other colleagues, he is overly apologetic. Calling 50 times again, telling me he loves me, he’d do anything for me, I can never leave him, what do I need? What do I want? It is a massive head fuck. When I accept his apology and I am back “in” again, he reneges on his promises and we go back to normal: me as the doormat doing everything. Even after ten years he probably couldn’t tell you how many DC I have, what my husband’s name is, what my hobbies and interests are, what I want out of life.

He tells me everything and expects me to treat every word like gold and like he is God. Even the mundane and disgusting stuff. He thinks Tracy from accounts is ugly. He forgot to wipe his bottom when he went to the toilet and now it's itching. Those prawns from lunch are repeating on him. He's going to fire Marcel the Head of Europe. Should he buy his next home in Monaco or Geneva?

I am a perfectionist who likes to belong, who has never felt “good enough,” who will just keep jumping to the detriment of my physical and mental health as the bar is raised higher and higher. I can see that this personality cocktail falls very well into the environment my boss has created. I am not the only version of me out there. There are many (mostly) women who have the adaptability and would be willing to take my place for the financial and status gains that it brings. I don’t think I am irreplaceable, I know I have to leave and I made a promise to my DH last night that I will leave by the end of 2020. Despite all this, I somehow still get swept up into my boss’ world and his values. I feel empty and worthless when he doesn’t speak to me. I keep checking my phone to see if I am in his good books again. I feel valuable again when I am. For the few days that it lasts, when I get lovebombed, I feel on cloud 9.

I suppose what I want to ask is, why is he like this? How does he view me? How can he cry and send a big bunch of flowers to a colleague he hardly knows when her mother dies and tell me to fuck off? I can’t get over that. Am I just an object to him? A possession to control? Does he care about me at all? I am in denial that I could be so dedicated to someone and sacrifice so much of my life to this person for a decade and have him not value me at all. This is what I am struggling with the most.

OP posts:
ReadingMyOwnStory · 01/01/2020 19:34

Literally...

“How can he cry and send a big bunch of flowers to a colleague he hardly knows when her mother dies and tell me to fuck off? I can’t get over that. Am I just an object to him? A possession to control? Does he care about me at all? I am in denial that I could be so dedicated to someone and sacrifice so much of my life to this person for a decade and have him not value me at all. This is what I am struggling with the most.”

With just a slightly different scenario I could have written exactly this right down to the words fuck off...

dreamingofmushrooms · 01/01/2020 19:39

He is a megalomaniac and a psychopath.

Thank your lucky stars you're not married to him and you can just leave your job.

The hills are that way >>>>>>>>

GooodMythicalMorning · 01/01/2020 19:46

Wow sounds a lot of work on 6 hours sleep if that! I'd be struggling after a week.

He I also second it sounds like an abusive relationship. I would definitely get looking for a new job. Even with the perks it doesn't sound worth all the hassle.

BlackSwan · 01/01/2020 19:52

Don't get signed off sick. You're not sick and you don't need to pretend to be a victim. Tell him (email if you need to), plain and simple, that you're going to your mother's funeral whether he likes it or not.
I'm more worried about how the hell you're going to leave him without him taking revenge. How old his he and is his retirement anywhere in sight.

He sounds like a vile individual. Parts of your post are stomach turning.

Haffiana · 01/01/2020 19:52

Bizarre that on a board where it is common to shriek 'narcissist' about every common or garden pathetic abuser, that no-one has pointed out that this is quite literally the description of the archetype of a true narcissist. OP is the archetype of 'supply'.

You are intelligent OP, so you must know this. What do you actually want from posting here?

BlackSwan · 01/01/2020 19:54

Haffiana that's a pretty lousy thing to post. This poor woman has lost her mother in the last few days and is in pieces.

OP I am so sorry for your loss, remiss of me not to say that.

SonicVersusGynaephobia · 01/01/2020 19:56

Are jobs like this actually real?

I assume you have an HR department?

Go to your mother's funeral (sorry for your loss, OP). If he sacks you, I think you could probably negotiate yourself a good settlement. Then spend some time with your DH and DC, before finding a more normal job.

madcatladyforever · 01/01/2020 19:59

My last boss was almost identical. The best thing I ever did was to leave.

ballsdeep · 01/01/2020 20:02

Why are you putting up with this? It's no way to live. He is an arse and you are letting him carry on this disgusting behaviour, for what? Money? Status? It's jot worth it

Therebythedoor · 01/01/2020 20:05

Will you be looking for work in the same field and will he be able to sabotage your efforts?

marvellousnightforamooncup · 01/01/2020 20:05

Leave this shit show and spend some time with your family rethinking your priorities and values. No job is worth this.

OPTIMUMMY · 01/01/2020 20:12

How big a big boss is he? It sounds like he is in a bubble of power and ego where the ‘rules’ don’t apply to him in the same way so HR etc are unlikely to help. It also sounds like you are still very much attached to the lifestyle of being in the limelight and being a ‘favourite’ but know deep down that it’s not sustainable and is having a negative impact on your family life. It sounds sensible that you are making plans to leave but in terms of coping in the meantime I think you need to try and manage him on the basis that you are leaving soon and you want it to be on good terms- so by that I mean trying hard not to get sucked into the trappings of the job- mentally start trying to detach and thinking more to what you want to be doing and where to try and reduce the impact of his judgement on you. I think it’s fairly typical egotistical behaviour to treat those further from him with more respect because he cares about his image, but those closest to him get to see the real him- so I don’t think he had real compassion for others and not you, I think that was all image. I think there have been so few boundaries between you and he for so long that he just continues to push to see how far he can go. I don’t think it’s an easy road ahead but I think you need to start pushing back- and calling him out on any ‘punishment’ - keep it polite and professional- try to establish simple routines that respect your boundaries. I suspect though it’s gone too far and you need to get out sooner than you might be ready for. Good luck.

rvby · 01/01/2020 20:14

@fcukedinthehead he's just a garden variety abuser. You're a garden variety abuse victim. Nothing he is doing is even novel, and you're reacting as victims of abuse tend to react.

You need to drop the rope. It's really that simple.

Dont your children need you more than this grown man does? Why is he so pathetic and needy, and why do you love to get approval from someone who can barely wipe his own arse? He sounds like a toddler having a tantrum and demanding the boob all day.

What will it take you to step off the rollercoaster OP? You've managed to get to breaking point and yet you can only talk about him, him, him.

You still exist. What do you want to do?

CalmFizz · 01/01/2020 20:16

What do you have to show for this job? Are you in a position to walk away?

Honestly, this read like a toxic emotional affair. Would you tolerate your husband having this kind of relationship? You’ve treated your family appallingly all because you’re addicted to some dickheads approval.

Savingforarainyday · 01/01/2020 20:21

I think you need to think more about why you stay than why he is a cunt

Yes

Cuddling57 · 01/01/2020 20:25

Quit your job tomorrow and write a movie about it to earn some income.

dancingbadger · 01/01/2020 20:28

He is a malevolent narcissicist. Run away as fast as you can.

Yes exactly this, he has no empathy, no guilt he will always treat you this way, life is far too short to put up with that shit. I'm very sorry to hear about your mother btw Thanks

misspiggy19 · 01/01/2020 20:41

Would you tolerate your husband having this kind of relationship? You’ve treated your family appallingly all because you’re addicted to some dickheads approval.

^I think OP is in love with him.

thefelineofthespecies · 01/01/2020 20:45

I've been in a similar situation OP. I'd recommend you stop trying to understand him or work out what he really thinks of you. You'll never work out the answer and even if you did, there's nothing to gain from knowing. You can't stay on his good side because that's impossible with abusers. Focus your energies on getting out and repairing your relationship with your DH. It's a wonderful feeling to be free Flowers

reginafelangee · 01/01/2020 20:47

Why on earth have you not looked for another job?

TheHumansAreDefinitelyDead · 01/01/2020 20:51

Why do you give so much to this man and this job?!

Are you in love with him? Beholden to him? Is your self esteem based entirely on his option of you?

Take a day off on the funeral. Or take day(a) off sick with stress

Get another job!!!! This is insane

eddielizzard · 01/01/2020 20:52

So sorry for the loss of your mum. This on it's own is devastating Flowers

This guy is a narcissistic psychopath and he doesn't give a shit about you other than whether you're going to toe the line. The best thing you can do for yourself is give in your notice asap. I don't see how anyone could take another year of this abuse. Absolutely no amount of perks make up for his treatment of you. He's crossed so many lines. I wonder if it's possible to take garden leave following your notice as his behaviour is deeply unreasonable?

For your own sanity and the welfare of your family, I think you really must leave as your top priority. Think about how you'd manage with the money, make a plan, and get the fuck out.

Also, document as much as you can, I'm sure you have witnesses (your entire team).

fcukedinthehead · 01/01/2020 20:53

Thank you for your responses

DH is also addicted to the lifestyle that we have from this job to some extent. He is always encouraging me to leave but at the same time he realises he has a standard of life he would not have had if I hadn't been working for my boss. I have been offered other jobs and other packages but when it comes down to it, nothing compares, because my boss "buys" people.

It is my mother dying which has caused this bubble to pop. Now I am in a world of pain about it all.

OP posts:
Nat6999 · 01/01/2020 20:55

Write everything down in chronological order, go to your mother's funeral & don't give him a second thought. Let him try to fire you & take him to a tribunal for unfair dismissal. Speak to ACAS as soon as you can & get all this on record & let them advise you on how to proceed, are you in a union?

TheHumansAreDefinitelyDead · 01/01/2020 20:55

Standard of life is nice, like a Golden cage is "nice"

Wake up Neo

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