Q: I have a secret: For the past three months, Ive been attending a local Jacks club (a men-only masturbation event). As someone recovering from sexual abuse, I find the party to be safe, therapeutic, and just sexy fun. I feel like I need this! Unfortunately, I spotted one of my employees at last weeks event. Although Im openly gay at my workplace, being naked, erect, and sexual in the same room as my employee felt wrong. I freaked out, packed up, and departed without him seeing me (I hope). Im his manager at work, and I feel that being sexual around him could damage our professional relationship. It could even have dangerous HR consequences. I realize he has every right to attend Jacks, as much right as me, but I wish he werent there. I want to continue attending Jacks, but what if hes there again? Frankly, Im terrified to discuss the topic with him. Help!
Just A Cock Kraving Safety
A: I hate to say it, but now that JACKS knows his employee attends these events, he really has to stop going, said Alison Green, the management consultant behind the popular Ask a Manager advice column (askamanager.org) and the author of Ask a Manager: How to Navigate Clueless Colleagues, Lunch-Stealing Bosses, and the Rest of Your Life at Work.
And why do you have to stop going to your beloved JO club?
In an employment relationship where hes in a position of power, said Green, JACKS has a responsibility to avoid any remotely sexual situation with an employee.
Green also strongly advises against pulling your employee aside and working out some sort of shared custody agreementyou get Jacks to yourself every other weekbecause initiating a conversation with a subordinate about when and where he likes to jack off would be a bad idea. She also doesnt think you can just keep going in the hopes that your employee wont be back.
If he continues to attend and it got back to anyone at their workplace, it would be really damaging to his reputationnot the fact that he was at the event to begin with, but the fact that he continued to attend knowing an employee was also participating, said Green. It would call his professional judgment into question, and its highly likely that HR would freak out about the potential legal liability that arises when you have a manager and a subordinate in a sexual context together.
It seems crazy unfair to me that you should have to stop going to parties you not only enjoy, JACKS, but that have aided in your recovery. And Green agreesit isnt fairbut with great power (management) comes great responsibility (avoiding places where your employees are known to jack off).
Its never going to feel fair to have to drop out of a private, out-of-work activity just because of your job, said Green. Im hoping its possible for JACKS to find a different club in a neighboring town. Or he could start his own club and offer a safe haven for other managers hiding out from potential run-ins with employeesJacks for Middle Managers or something!
While I had Greens attention, I asked her about other sorts of gay social events that might toss a manager and an employee into a sexual contextthink of the thousands of men who attended the Folsom Street Fair in San Francisco last month. Gay men (and others) walk around in various states of undress or dress up, and a lot of flirting, groping, and more goes down. Should gay men in management have to skip events like Folsom lest they run into men they supervise?
Public events are different from private clubs, said Green. A private club is more intimate, and a public event is, well, public. And its not reasonable or practical to expect managers to entirely curtail their social lives or never attend a public event. But a private club thats organized specifically and primarily for sexual activity is in a different category.
However, gay managers who run into employees at events like Folsom or circuit parties shouldnt ogle, hit on, or photograph their employees.
If someone who reports to you is in a sexual situation, said Green, you should keep moving and give them as much space as you reasonably can.
Im going to give myself the last word here: Youve been attending that JO club for months and saw your employee there only once, JACKS, so I think you can risk going back at least one more time. I would hate to see you deprived of release (and see your recovery set back!) if your employee was there only that one time.
Follow Alison Green on Twitter @AskAManager.
Q: My wife recently came out as bisexual after spending time with a woman who awakened her feelings. I suspected for a long time that my wife was probably bisexual, so I had no issues telling her to explore this side of her sexuality. My only caveat for opening our marriage was that I wasnt comfortable with her entering into a relationship with another man. This pissed my wife off, she told me I was being irrational, we fought about it, blah blah blah. Fast-forward a few weeks. My wife swiped right on a guy on Tinder and then checked in with me to see if the boundaries had shifted. I have a hotwife-type fetish, so I gave her the okay to swap sexy texts and we agreed on a possible threesome. It didnt pan out, my wife was bummed, we moved on. She has started chatting up other guys on Tinder. Nothing has happened yet between them, but I feel like Im being pulled ahead of where Im comfortable in exploring an open marriage. Im not opposed to simple hookups, but a separate relationship with a man? The intimacy and affection parts bug me. How do you acclimate to this kind of adjustment? Or do I throw the brakes on and reverse?
Personally Feeling Fearful Today
A: So you gave your wife permission to explore her bisexualitywith other womenand she jumped on Tinder and started swiping right on men? Even though youd told her that wasnt something you were comfortable with? And it now appears that your wife doesnt just want to have sexual experiences with women and men (but mostly with men), but relationships with other women and men (but mostly with men)? And she only checks in with you about your boundaries to see if theyve crumbled yet?
This isnt how someone opens up a marriage, PFFT, unless that someone isnt interested in staying married. So youre going to need to hit the brakes and get some clarity from your wife. Youre willing to open your marriage up to allow for outside sexual experiences, preferably ones you get to take part in (hot-wifing scenes, threesomes), but youre not interested in polyamorythat is, you dont want your wife to have a boyfriend. If a boyfriend is what she wants, and shes unwilling to compromise and cant negotiate with you in good faith, you dont want to be her husband.