Queer Abby,
How do you deal with a coworker who complains too much? There is a woman in my department who has become comfortable enough with me to spend long amounts of time chatting with me. She's a nice person but unfortunately I think there's a slight weakness in her social skills where she thinks complaining to someone and chatting socially are the same thing. She has the capacity to complain endlessly about things that are bothering her, and doesn't realize that people don't like to be on the receiving end of that for long periods of time.
I'm a sensitive person and I tend to take on her frustration and bad moods when we talk, even if I was feeling fine beforehand. I'm glad she feels comfortable with me but I'm not her therapist and I'm not her husband.
What's the best way to handle this? To further complicate matters she's a more senior member of my department and I have to spend a lot of time around her and training under her, so I can't afford to make things unpleasant between us. Thoughts? Thanks Queer Abby!
Sincerely,
Not Your Therapist
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Dear Not Your Therapist,
This is a difficult situation for anyone to be in - but especially so for you, due to the fact that this boundary-breach is coming from a superior at work. Your co-worker, who we'll call Suzan, is demonstrating a complete lack of self-awareness by pummeling you with her emotional baggage. We've all met these kinds of people - sad souls who have fallen into a habit of pathological oversharing, without the mature socialization necessary to have a genuine back-and-forth conversation. This is incredibly draining on the recipient, and - while not necessarily intentional - Suzan's lack of consideration for your feelings borders on emotional abuse.
Therapists are trained to process the emotional turmoil they expose themselves to every day. Otherwise they'd go crazy. You are not a therapist. You are not getting paid. You do not have this specialized training, and the fact that you are noticing a difference in your mental wellbeing before and after taking to Suzan means you need to get the hell out of this toxic one-sided relationship.
But how. Suzan obviously won't be the one to establish a boundary, so unfortunately that falls on you. Think of it as fine-tuning a vital life skill. If you can establish a boundary with Suzan, you can do it with anyone. Here are a couple of ideas.
Some women view gay men as ever-cheery court jesters put on Earth for the amusement of straights, and as such at work we are sometimes confronted with a conversational tone lacking in professionalism. In their eyes we have the same one-dimensionality as the gay characters they've been exposed to television, and no woman's going to second-guess oversharing if she's the Karen Walker to our Jack MacFarlane.
Good luck, and please let Queer Abby know how it turns out!
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