Times Colonist

Work spouses boost morale

Pseudo-marital relationsh­ips contribute to happiness in the workplace, study finds

- DANIELLE BRAFF

She’s the first person you look for when you step into the office, and the last person you see before you leave. You often eat lunch with each other, and you take coffee breaks together every chance you get.

He knows everything about your kids and your spouse, and when you’re out for post-work drinks, many assume that you’re dating.

This is your work spouse: a co-worker with whom you have a super-close platonic relationsh­ip. You support and bicker with each other at work about office and non-office issues. Picture Regis Philbin and Kelly Ripa, or NBC’s co-anchors Savannah Guthrie and Matt Lauer. Guthrie even slipped up and referred to her husband, Mike Feldman, as Matt recently on the Today show.

Today, 70 per cent of people in office jobs have or have had work spouses, according to a 2017 study by Office Pulse, which analyzes office profession­als. This is up from 65 per cent in 2010 and 32 per cent in 2006.

They’re becoming more prevalent because men and women are putting in more hours at the office. North Americans work an average of 47 hours per week, which is 1 1/2 hours more than they did a decade ago, according to Gallup. As a result, co-workers are depending on their work partners more than their real partners, said Chad McBride, professor and chair of the Department of Communicat­ion Studies at Creighton University, and co-author of a 2015 study on work spouses.

Those with them are happy they have them. Sixty eight per cent say this pseudo-marital relationsh­ip contribute­s to their happiness in the office.

Chris Chatman, co-manager at Fountainhe­ad bar/restaurant in Chicago, said he’s thrilled about the work spouse he’s had for nearly two years. He and Susan Rosentrete­r see each other about 50 to 60 hours a week.

“Susan is a whiskey broad, tough as nails, tattooed, and my real wife is very nurturing,” Chatman said. “Most weeks, I see Susan more than I see my wife in terms of dedicated, conscious time.”

Work spouses have become so prevalent in the office space that psychologi­sts have cited them as being essential to a positive work experience.

According to the Office Pulse study, 29 per cent of the work spouses said they’d done something to make their work spouse look better at work, and 16 per cent have done their co-worker’s job.

But for the most part, a work spouse — like a real spouse — has served as another support system.

“A work spouse can be the support system someone needs to handle the stress that comes from heavy workloads, workplace politics and job instabilit­y,” said Dion Metzger, psychiatri­st and co-author of The Modern Trophy Wife.

Rosentrete­r and Chatman said they see eye-to-eye on the policy issues at work, and they jell even when it gets stressful at the bar.

“We understand each other,” Rosentrete­r said.

And work spouses may understand aspects of office life that actual spouses don’t fully comprehend, Metzger said. They frequently end up turning to each other rather than the spouse at home when they want to vent about their day.

When this happens, it’s normal for the real spouse to feel jealous, even if there’s nothing suspicious going on with the work spouse.

“Any time we feel that our partner is spending all this time with someone, we don’t feel great about it — it’s a normal response,” said Nikki Martinez, a psychologi­st. “They realize the role that this person plays.”

Sometimes, they envy the qualities that the other person has — which the real spouse may be lacking.

Lauren Chatman said she loves her husband’s work wife and appreciate­s that she helped him become a better husband. Chatman tended to let issues slide, while the work wife doesn’t let anything go.

“She wags her finger at him and gives him the death stare look that she gives her own husband,” Chatman said.

“He literally jokes that he gets it from two wives 24/7,” Chatman said.

At the same time, she sometimes gets jealous.

“We got into a recent tiff about how he is funnier with her than with me,” Chatman said of her husband, who spends all day with his work wife and then comes home and continues texting her.

He told Chatman, “She fixes my hair — you never do that — you just let me walk around looking like a dork.”

McBride found that 20 per cent of the real spouses were jealous of the work spouse, and the Office Pulse study found that seven per cent of work spouses have crossed the line into sexual relationsh­ips.

No lines have been crossed with Chris Chatman’s work spouse, and the small tiffs haven’t evolved into bigger issues.

But if a relationsh­ip with a work spouse becomes more than platonic, the problem can be larger than anticipate­d.

“When they cross the line into a sexual relationsh­ip, then that can lead to sexual harassment charges if things go wrong,” said Donna Ballman, a Florida employment attorney and author of Stand Up for Yourself Without Getting Fired.

Even without a sexual relationsh­ip, there can be emotional infidelity if the relationsh­ip gets too personal or intimate.

You may be able to tell if you’re crossing that line if you’re doing something you know you wouldn’t be happy with your spouse saying or doing if he or she were in a similar situation, Martinez said.

“If you feel like you’re getting out of line, you should pull back little by little, not to where it’s highly noticeable, but you need to get back in the zone where it’s appropriat­e,” Martinez said.

But overall, work spouses tend to stay in that appropriat­e zone, McBride said.

“Based on our data, work spouse relationsh­ips are strictly platonic,” he said. “When work spouses are open and honest about their relationsh­ip with their actual spouses, it seems to go well for the most part.”

Often, work spouses become friends with the actual spouse, and McBride said he’s seen couples socialize outside of work and even going on vacations together.

 ??  ?? Susan Rosentrete­r and Chris Chatman clink their glasses at The Fountainhe­ad in Chicago, where Chatman is the general manager and beer director and his “work spouse” Rosentrete­r is the bar manager and spirits director.
Susan Rosentrete­r and Chris Chatman clink their glasses at The Fountainhe­ad in Chicago, where Chatman is the general manager and beer director and his “work spouse” Rosentrete­r is the bar manager and spirits director.

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