Sticky situation at work. Help/Advice needed please

Sticky situation at work. Help/Advice needed please

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broken biscuit

Original Poster:

1,633 posts

202 months

Thursday 8th August 2013
quotequote all
A bit of a strange one.

I am a civil servant, working a 24/7 role. my wife works for the same organisation, but in a different role. 18 months ago, our marriage fell apart, and she had a fling with a colleague. I found out rather quickly, it ended, we worked it out, and are still together, happier than ever.

The colleague mrs B had a fling with was sent to work in another office as a punishment, 3 miles away, for 3 months. He was then brought back to the same office, working alongside my wife (I work the opposite shifts to him). We protested this, but the bosses werent interested, and did nothing.

I have actively sought to avoid this other bloke, not applying for other roles because I knew I would have to work alongside him. I was warned that any revenge would finish my career and see me in court. I have kept professional, but 12 months ago finally had enough of the snide comments and grief from others (not him, he wont enter the same room as me) that I asked for a transfer.

Last week I find (via a phonecall from my line manager) that this bloke is coming to work on my shift. Not in the same office, but our paths will inevitably cross most days. I have again been warned that anything other than professional behaviour will result in disciplinary proceedings against me. I have appealed to my bosses (3 levels up) and been told 'tough'.

My wife has, for the second day running, returned home in tears because of the stress this is causing us (probably resurrected guilt, I assume, but we didnt need this). She is 7 months pregnant, and not needing the stress. Our direct managers see the issue, and do not agree with the boss's decision, but the decision makers, once aware of the issue, haven't even bothered to speak to my wife or myself about it.

I have spoken to our equivalent of a union, who have told me there is little I can do, and I may have to put up with it, as they cannot see a way out of it. The decision makers are all (3 of them) on annual leave, so I cannot speak with them face-to-face.

I see this issue has to potential to end with increased stress for my wife and I, which we don't need. Our employers seem to have overlooked and 'duty of care' in lieu of the 'needs of the business'.

I am at a loss as to what to do, other than get on with it, destroying myself from the inside, or going off sick over it. I have been told to 'get over it' and 'man up' etc etc, but ultimately would you want to work with the bloke who shagged your wife? What can I do?


broken biscuit

Original Poster:

1,633 posts

202 months

Thursday 8th August 2013
quotequote all
mu0n said:
First thing's first, I'd get a paternity test done.

Secondly, I personally couldn't a) take someone back who has been shagging someone else and b) never in a million years be able to work in the same company as my now ex and her shagging partner.

I can't workout whether to commend your professionalism, courage and forgiving nature or to mock it.

Either way, it's a sticky situation (sorry about the pun, not intended).
No need for paternity test, I am happy my children are mine. I made the decision to work my marriage out, and we are happier and stronger than ever. That decision, right or wrong in the eyes of many, was mine and mine alone to make. I hate the bloke, and would quite happily beat him within an inch of his life, but I know the outcome of it, so won't.

broken biscuit

Original Poster:

1,633 posts

202 months

Thursday 8th August 2013
quotequote all
I can't forgive him. The affair was his and my wife's fault, I accept that. I have dealt with what she did. It took me a long time, but I sorted it. In my line of work, you trust your colleagues with your life. Some you get on with, others you don't but you trust them. For him to knowingly do what he did, is the biggest breach of trust he could make. That I cannot forgive. Rightly or wrongly, I will never forgive him.

broken biscuit

Original Poster:

1,633 posts

202 months

Thursday 8th August 2013
quotequote all
Inkyfingers said:
First thing to do is keep a record of ALL requests you have made and ANY comments made with dates etc etc, whether they be comments made by colleagues or your bosses.

Are you a member of a union? If so i'd be on to them.

It sounds like a horrendous situation, i'd be looking for another job if I were you. I'd never normally advocate this, but if it is really making your wife unhappy then maybe she should look to get signed off work with stress, as the health of her and the baby is the most important thing of all.

Personally, I'm amazed you have been ok with her continuing to work with him.
All requests have been verbal so far, and all responses too. I have emails confirming we all have to get on with it, the decision is made. The union (or equivalent) have spoken with the decision maker, as has my second tier line manager, and have been told tough, decision stands, deal with it. I have no other avenues to pursue as far as I can see. I have had no choice but to put up with her working with him. She has not spoken with him, I know this from colleagues, and he has avoided both of us, which suited me fine. I also understand from colleagues he does not want to move to my group, and is well aware of my opinion and feelings towards him.

broken biscuit

Original Poster:

1,633 posts

202 months

Thursday 8th August 2013
quotequote all
Looking for a new job is my top priority now - just what, I have no idea. My skillset is unique to my role, and there is nothing in the private sector I can see that directly reflects.

broken biscuit

Original Poster:

1,633 posts

202 months

Thursday 8th August 2013
quotequote all
DocJock said:
This situation was caused by your wife and a work colleague deciding to have an affair.

Why should it be the responsibility of the employers to clean up the mess they made?

If your wife is getting "stressed" maybe she shouldn't have been shagging someone else form the same office as both her and her husband.
It is her fault, the matter was dealt with and now work have chosen to make changes that impact on me, not her. She is 'stressed' as she knows how I feel, and that obviously has knock-on effects. Ultimately, the situation was not caused by me, but I have to suffer. Had I binned her, she would still be there, and so would he. Would that be any different? No.

broken biscuit

Original Poster:

1,633 posts

202 months

Monday 7th October 2013
quotequote all
Update - all sorted - He moved shifts and we no longer work near each other, and I have a new role. Alls well that ends well. I over-reacted initially, and when I took a step back, it wasn't so bad, and was easy to sort. Job done.