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DARE TO ASK: Workplace talk doesn’t sound sweet

By PHILLIP MILANO

Question

The male managers at my summer job referred to me and other girls working there as “sweetheart,” “honey,” “sugar,” “baby,” etc. This escalated to some of them leering, groping and making sexual comments. I quit because it got too crazy, and I’m too shy to mention it to them. Are most men who call a woman “baby” or “honey” hoping to escalate these seemingly tender remarks to sexual behavior? Or do some genuinely feel “fatherly” toward a young woman?

Annika, 18, Tucson, Ariz.

Replies

When men use these terms to address women of any age it is demeaning. They’re trying to be cute and superior. When I was a child 70 years ago, a waiter called my mom “honey” and she said, “I’m not your honey.” This obviously has been a bone of contention for many years.

Clifford, 76, Jacksonville

These creeps’ behavior is not professional, moral or legal, and not the way a true mentor behaves. They targeted you and the other summer students because they figured (correctly it seems) that you would be too shy or unsure of yourselves, or afraid of being fired, to say or do anything about it. Prove those scum bags wrong. Start with the EEOC, tell them what happened, and go from there.

Ann, 38, Missouri

As long as you and women like yourself are “too shy” to stand up for yourselves, acts like these will continue to happen.

R.O., 43, female, New York

Expert says

To clarify:

Groping, leering, grabbing – no.

“Honey,” “baby,” “sugar” – no.

“It is a very nice day” – yes.

“I once had a hamster named Luther and there is an impending lunar eclipse that will harm my garage next Wednesday” – odd, but yes.

What’s important to remember here is that even if words or actions aren’t pervasive or severe enough to reach “illegal” status, they may not be OK at work, says Susan Strauss of Minnesota, a harassment consultant for more than 20 years.

“It really falls to the organization to prevent these types of behaviors in the first place so that things making people uncomfortable don’t rise to more serious levels later,” she said.

The men in question probably weren’t trying to be mentorly (we guessed that, too), but weren’t likely seeking serious “action,” either, Strauss said.

“I’d say this was not meant as flirting, which is generally done in a more respectful way. And you wouldn’t leer. Also, with flirting or putting out feelers, if you don’t get a response, you stop. These men didn’t stop.”

So, in her opinion – and context is everything – the “honeys” and “babies” in this case were thrown around as part of a power move, to try to keep the young girls in their place or relegate them to a lower status.

The best action: Get the company involved if you’re squeamish about a situation.

“And we’re finding that more complaints in the courts are coming from teen workers,” Strauss said. “They are finally realizing they have a voice.”

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