joeylittle
Sponsor
Nah - didn't mean to say that - just that business communication and friendly work communication are two different things. You commented that you knew how to keep it appropriate, I was saying that in this instance, you didn't. I'm sure you're excellent in business communication, I've no reason to think otherwise. But, when in doubt, don't cross the streams of work task and social comment - best to keep those kinds of emails separate, that's all.JoeyLittle says I don't know how to write, so I better stick with it.
I don't know that this is about PC, I think it's just about workplace harassment dynamics. I have a hard time judging a 25-year-old for not knowing how to read a friendly, loose suggestion that she toss someone a favor - especially when the someone is an older male. So, ultimately, I think it's good she said what she needed to say. I think the boss maybe handled it poorly, that's the bit that hits my craw. Boss could have both taken her seriously and not totally chewed out @Lopezwhere'sthefire.I'd personally rather express myself and take my risks/and yeah maybe consequences than scrub it to oblivion for a p.c. crowd
So, yes, actually - I guess there was PC in there - but I think it was the boss.
At any rate - intention does count, and @Lopezwhere'sthefire - you were clearly not intending to cause the colleague any distress whatsoever. So if I were you I'd chalk it up to mini-lesson, and don't let it build up in your sense of self. You truly weren't meaning harm, and the comment stood at least a 50-50 chance of passing by innocuously. It was just a bit of bad luck.