Baltimore Sun

Employee sits on fence with two companies

- By Amy Dickinson askamy@amydickins­on.com Twitter@askingamy Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency

Dear Amy: For years, I have wanted to switch companies for a different position. The company I was interested in approached me out of the blue and offered me a great job.

After several meetings, I gave notice to my current employer, and while they were disappoint­ed, they wished me well.

Once I was scheduled to begin the new position, I was overcome with anxiety. Most of it was the regret of hurting the employers who had been nice to me over the years, as well as the fear of having to learn different systems, which felt overwhelmi­ng.

I told the new company I needed to put off this new start date a couple of months (which they were fine with) and told my current employers I would stay while I thought things through.

They have done everything to make my job better. I am beyond grateful to both companies for handling this so well, and I am happy to not be forced to choose until I am ready.

I am now overcome with shame, embarrassm­ent and just feel like a dope.

Eventually I will want to try out this new position, but I fear that when I am ready it is going to be even harder to leave the Old Company since they are now pulling out all the stops to make me happy!

I feel foolish for not seizing a great opportunit­y and at the same time want to be fair to both, but I’m not sure how to make the move later when I’m having such a hard time now.

— Mortified

Dear Mortified: If New Company had refused your request to delay your start time, you’d have made your choice and adjusted to all the changes by now. The generous options these companies have allowed you to pursue seem to have paralyzed you.

Now you must make a decision. I can’t tell you what decision to make, but you have to make one. The longer you delay, the more like a dope you will feel.

If you leave, you may regret it. If you stay, you might also have regrets.

It’s OK to stumble a bit. It’s OK to pursue an opportunit­y but then change your mind. But you’ve turned what should be a transactio­nal experience into an emotionall­y fraught experience.

Decide what is best for you, not these two employers. Make your choice, notify them and commit to the choice you’ve made. If you end up declining to move to New Company, thank them for their patience and tell them that Old Company has made staying where you are the best choice for you.

Dear Amy: I have a brother and sister-in-law who brag incessantl­y about their two brilliant, gorgeous, talented granddaugh­ters.

That alone would be annoying, but at the same time they are critical of my grandchild­ren, who are, of course, brilliant, gorgeous and talented.

The last time we spoke, my sister-in-law actually said that her granddaugh­ter is a genius. I could only comment that this was spoken as a true grandmothe­r. But she asserted that no — this was true.

I am fortunate to have many friends who have grandchild­ren. Occasional­ly we relate a story about them that makes us proud — but we don’t gloat or brag.

Am I just lucky, or is bragging the norm?

— Anonymous

Some people seem to only relate to others through asserting superiorit­y. The ubiquity of social media — where people inflate their triumphs and occasional­ly overshare about their tragedies — has also inflated this tendency.

So yes — bragging has become the norm.

The good news is that this makes us “normies” all the more special!

My daughter once wrote a passionate essay in defense of being “average,” and I’ve never been prouder (but now — I’m bragging!).

Your brother and sisterin-law get to brag about their grands, but they may not critique yours. You should nip that in the bud.

Dear Anonymous:

Dear Amy: You gave a helpful response to “Buried,” who was trying to cope with a paper-hoarding spouse.

Setting up online accounts will help to reduce paper. They should also invest in a scanner. Scanned documents can pile up virtually, and will not contribute to the paper clutter.

— Scanned That

Dear Scanned: Great suggestion. Thank you.

Copyright 2022 by Amy Dickinson

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