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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:
pallisers · 01/01/2020 23:50

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.

And you are letting yourself be bought.

In your shoes I would document everything including him refusing you leave for your mother's funeral. Go to the most senior HR person in the company and tell them what you have gone through. Tell them you will leave if you get a shit-hot reference and a package. Then find another job and, frankly, find some self-respect, some standards, some values in life.

I appreciate that you have been abused by this guy but you put up with it for money - not because you had no where else to turn. I think you need therapy to be honest because tolerating this when there is a reasonable alternative is not normal. And your dh's reaction isn't normal either.

pallisers · 01/01/2020 23:51

oh and sorry for your loss. Sometimes it takes a big thing like death of a parent to open your eye's to the life you are actually living.

acatcalledjohn · 02/01/2020 00:07

Sometimes it takes a big thing like death of a parent to open your eye's to the life you are actually living.

Or rather the life you are missing out on courtesy of a dictator.

IdblowJonSnow · 02/01/2020 00:19

You have proof of his abuse on text! This is just madness.
You need to get signed off and not go back. Your boss is a psychopath.
So sorry about your mum. You must go to her funeral. Flowers
I do understand its hard to leave an abusive work relationship btw but this sounds so very extreme that you must.
Time to put you and your family first.

madroid · 02/01/2020 00:20

Very sorry for your loss OP Flowers

Do you realize you are legally entitled to time off albeit unpaid to organize and attend a funeral?

I would email him tomorrow and tell him he's gone too far this time. That you expect an apology and unhampered time of for at least a week. That you expect him to think about it and for him to realise you are worth it and deserve it.

If he does not acquiesce you have a very good tribunal claim that you would certainly win.

Then you must make it your priority to find another job. You are being subjected to abuse OP and you are a fool to let it continue. The status is hollow and you can negotiate the money elsewhere. You are in a co dependent relationship with a psychopath. It will be hard for you to withdraw from the cycle of abuse. But you must. For yourself and your family.

Time to change into a healthier life. I'm sure your mum would be very cross with you for putting up with such appalling behavior from a work relationship for the sake of just money and a misplaced sense of pride/ego in having such a hard job.

LoafEater · 02/01/2020 00:21

You have Stockholm syndrome and need to escape this abuser immediately. Do not even think about not going to your Mothers funeral for Gods sake.

I used to work for the London office of a company owned by a very very rich American man. We worked so bloody hard for that man, and our efforts were really just to amuse him and make him enough money in sterling to amuse him on his trips to London. He used to come over 2 or 3 times a year and expect me and my boss to drop everything and accompany him to ever fancier restaurants, where he would order my food for me. He was a fucking nightmare who was moody and difficult, but he was an angel compared to the psychopath you work for!

I'd rather be on the dole.

MintyMabel · 02/01/2020 03:34

I'd give him your two weeks' notice.

SoleBizzz · 02/01/2020 04:27

Get away. Did yoir mom know how he treats you?

Nextphonewontbesamsung · 02/01/2020 04:45

Gracious, what a story! I read it all as I'm trying to get back to sleep.

Five5goldrings · 02/01/2020 06:42

Sorry for your loss OP
What would you say to your DC if they had a job like yours?
Status Vs Mental Health
Your choice

Kraai · 02/01/2020 06:51

OP I'm sorry for your loss.

For your situation though, prepare your finances to live to lower standards. DH should be supportive, he surely values you more than a big house or trips in private jets, as comfortable as they may be.

Then double check your contract and quit. DO NOT WAIT UNTIL THE END OF 2020! Do it ASAP - whether that's 1 week or 5 months. The damage you're going to do to yourself after how he's treated you following your mother's death will gnaw away at you. It will make his behaviour even more intolerable.

He's going to go NUTS when you do. Ignoring you, calling you 10000s of times, and most especially badmouthing you. However, everybody in your industry knows you're good at what you do because you've been next to him for so long, so badmouthing you isn't something I think you need to worry about. Not long term.

And what about just taking a break? Quit with no job to go to. Take some time "off", have some therapy. Then think about where you want to be and what you want to do. If that means downsizing because of a large mortgage, it'll be worth it.

Given how well known you must be in your field and that you've already had offers, once word gets out you've quit, you'll probably have some more. Negotiate a package that suits you ie less money but not so much travel - or whatever.

Once you've had some time to breathe, you'll be able to think more clearly about everything in your life.

custardbear · 02/01/2020 06:57

Honestly, find a new job, it's not worth it. It's an abusive relationship and life is worth more than thst - goal for 2020 - new job!

peonypower · 02/01/2020 07:01

My position is not dissimilar. Except that my CEO not THAT bad. I'm not sure anyone is such a nightmare as yours.

Is this a listed company? Because your chairman should be monitoring for toxic leadership. This is the route I have used in the past in a previous role.

Weenurse · 02/01/2020 07:03

Reach out to others in your industry for a different job.
Quit
That may shock him into behaving better, it may not. At least you know you will be out of there.
Let your DH carry the family finances for a bit

kalinkafoxtrot45 · 02/01/2020 07:08

This man is a psychopath. For the sake of your physical and mental health, you need to quit. Your DH should be backing you to the hilt on this.

Pinkbonbon · 02/01/2020 07:20

Malignant narcissist.

Just leave. Stop letting him have power over you. Making you kiss a funeral gave him a hard-on, he likes making people suffer,it makes him feel big.

Leave. You could even sue him after you are gone. But if I were you I would just cut and run as fast as pos. Give two week notice if you must but prepare for a rotten two weeks. If I were you I would just go. Life is too short to belong to a malevolent dictator.

Pinkbonbon · 02/01/2020 07:21

*miss

ginandbearit · 02/01/2020 07:22

Your boss sounds like he's running on cocaine , verging on psychosis . Get out as soon as you can .

GoFiguire · 02/01/2020 07:25

Do you work for WayStar?

BasilOfBakerStreet · 02/01/2020 07:41
Confused
00Sassy · 02/01/2020 07:59

Firstly I’m so very sorry for your loss Flowers

Just leave, just do it, he will replace you anyway sadly. He’ll just find someone else who will take your place. Some other poor ‘favourite’

You aren’t irreplaceable in his eyes, just an object.
Sure, he’ll make out you are causing him untold inconvenience and probably either be very angry or very smarmy (or both) in trying to get you to stay but only because that’s slightly easier than filling your shoes when he hasn’t been actively lining up someone new.

Go to your Mum’s funeral Flowers

Walk away. Stand up to him.

LynetteScavo · 02/01/2020 08:36

You are obviously good at what you do. There are other jobs out there. It's time to go and work elsewhere.

I totally get why you've stayed so long, but you'll never be able to forgive him fir his reaction to your mothers death.

I'm so sorry about your loss Thanks

Hopefully, long term, good will come if this and you'll be able to work somewhere where you're not treated so poorly. Don't even try to unpick your bosses behaviour. (Essentially he treats you like this because he can, and he'll send flowers to people if it's in his best interest to...doesn't feel he needs to be nice to you at the moment, non of us can tell you why) Just know it's not best for you to subject yourself to this, there are other jobs out there, and move on.

Wildorchidz · 02/01/2020 08:40

What is your income?
Does your husband work?

brassbrass · 02/01/2020 08:46

Sorry I couldn't even finish reading your post. Why have you sacrificed your life to this unhealthy and unrewarding existence? I feel sorry for your DH that your priorities are so out of whack. There's no fixing this you just leave. What a waste of a life.

SilverSurfer2020 · 02/01/2020 08:49

I have been offered other jobs and other packages but when it comes down to it, nothing compares, because my boss "buys" people.

Yeah but the other packages wouldn't include what he demands so it's not a like for like comparison!

Take another package.
Perhaps you can discretely warn prospective employers that he won't like you leaving and will slander you, which he probably will.

I don't understand why you've taken all this without going to HR about him (??!!)

Also, totally as an aside, I'm wondering why a wealthy, successful man is "having" to take his employee to dinner every evening that he's in London - doesn't he gave a girlfriend (or escort) to take??
If have thought there'd be a million suger babe types (and even non sugar babe types) tripping over themselves to be involved with him.

Have you actually been having a sexual relationship with him as well - his demands and manipulation and your response to it to date makes me wonder if he's manipulated you into that as well.