Los Angeles Times

Co-worker is a big pain

- Send questions to Amy Dickinson by email to askamy@tribune.com.

Dear Amy: I have worked closely with a co-worker for five years. She can be warm and generous, is a hard worker and is always the first to volunteer for projects and committees.

She is also incredibly sensitive and thin-skinned and often perceives slights in benign comments. When this happens, she flies off the handle. She has stormed out of meetings in tears and snapped at co-workers. She recently said something hurtful about a colleague (presumably meant to be funny) in a public forum.

I have stopped defending her, both publicly and privately. But because I think her behavior is atrocious, now and then I still “run interferen­ce” for her to prevent her from melting down and to protect others’ feelings.

She often wants to vent about how she has been mistreated and asks for advice about how to handle these imaginary insults, but she rejects any actual help and seems to only want to be told that she is right and others are wrong.

Colleagues and I are constantly walking on eggshells around this person, and we resent it.

I feel like I’m being emotionall­y bullied, but confrontin­g her will likely mean making the workplace uncomforta­ble, possibly forever, as she tends to be unforgivin­g.

She has experience­d trying personal circumstan­ces in the past few years, and we work in a setting that gives workers a lot of autonomy (i.e. behavior has to be really egregious for a supervisor to get involved). Any advice? Emotional Hostage

Dear Hostage: You have kindly run interferen­ce for your co-worker for years, expertly reading her moods and smoothing things over for her so that she will be shielded from the natural consequenc­es of her actions. No doubt you have done this for her because you are a genuinely good person who wants to protect her and others from her actions. Perhaps you’ve also done this for your own reasons. Her volatility makes you uncomforta­ble. You also sound a little afraid of her moods and behavior.

Emotional bullies get the best of people by making others check their own reactions to try to protect themselves. Over time, this can make things much worse.

If she is acting out, don’t offer help or advice. Never “protect” her from a meltdown. If she is venting to you and asks for advice, tell her, “You ask for advice, but you don’t seem to actually want it. I’m confident you can figure this out.”

The loose environmen­t at your workplace gives her a lot of latitude about her behavior, but this environmen­t might not be the best fit for her. If her unhappines­s and behavior at work interferes with her (and others’) ability to do your jobs, then it would be time for a supervisor to offer her a course correction.

Dear Amy: “Quiet Neighbors” wondered if it was reasonable for their neighbors to use loud lawn mowers and leaf blowers in the morning.

We asked our neighbors at our weekend house to limit and schedule their very noisy yardwork. They refused. So we waited until they had company and ran our mower (the way they routinely do). They were much more respectful after that. Done

Dear Done: A little dose of “what’s good for the goose is good for the gander” is sometimes all it takes.

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