People that throw fits like that need a time-out and a nap.
Really though, sorry that's going on
Does it make it worse if you offer to try to help?
Well, the real problem here is that our boss/the company owner is a terd.
He's not given a raise to the office manager in well over two years, she wants a raise and has asked for one, and he refuses to be an adult and talk to her about it because he doesn't want to give her a raise, but he also doesn't want her to quit and he thinks he might say something stupid to her that will cause her to quit. My dad has taken it upon himself to be her advocate over the past couple of weeks, trying to convince him just to do it. So finally the owner basically said, "Fine, just give her what she wants," and put it on my dad to basically choose her salary. He asked her for a number, and she gave him one based on what a business office manager makes. So he set her salary based on that, and now the owner is ho-humming, saying, "Ohh, well she's not really an office manager," and to prove his point he's calling my dad with these stupid little unimportant things and saying in a cheeky tone, "Hmm, I wonder if this is something an office manager would do." Meanwhile my dad is trying to get year-end financials put together, and we have to do this for seven different companies. So it was after one of the owner's stupid cheeky phone calls that my dad was finally driven to a meltdown.
My dad told me that this office manager lady would even be happy with just $1,000 more per year, to which I say, "Why in the bleep are you allowing such a big deal to be made of $40 per paycheck then?" It's not like she's doing poorly financially. Basically, my dad was dragged into something that he never should've been a part of, and he's not assertive enough to outright refuse to be a part of it.
This is just one matter in a long line of stupidity by this owner. A few weeks ago he told my dad, who is the head accountant and vastly underpaid, that someone suggested to him that he hire a CFO and then said, "But we both know we can't afford that." A total slap in the face to my dad. I was pretty mad when I heard about that.
The problem is that if my dad quits, then I'm out of a job, and I have tuition and a mortgage to pay for among other things. I am currently in the middle of going to school full-time trying to get an accounting degree while still working full-time, and my chances of getting an accounting job without an accounting degree are not very good. I've already decided that I want to quit and get another job as soon as I get my degree, but I have also felt like I have my dad in a precarious situation where he's almost a little stuck, feeling frustrated with his job but not wanting to put me out of work. The one maybe good thing, though, is that me having a job helps my dad because otherwise he would have my work to do plus what he already has. So it's not like I'm just dead weight either. Basically we would both need to agree to quit at the same time to make it the most painless for both of us.
Anyways, some good did come out of it because he spent 10-15 minutes venting to me and I had a chance to say some things to him that I've been wanting to say but haven't. He told me he doesn't intend to leave this job, but some things are going to have to change, and we've both identified ways that we can control that will make things better for him, starting with me taking on more work and him getting more organized once this year-end mess is over.
(Extra reading for anyone who cares)
The other thing in all of this is that I'm seeing some generational sin coming through again, and I hate it. I don't know what my grandfather's father was like, but I do know he came from a broken home. And my grandfather was a man prone to being grumpy and having angry outbursts. He even once stood up in the middle of church and yelled at the pastor.
You could say that my dad is an improvement on my grandfather's behavior as he's a pretty patient man, especially with my mom. There are certain things, though, with which he can go from 0 to heated in a very short amount of time. He doesn't understand technology very well so he gets frustrated with that really easily, and I had already mentioned before about how he gets frustrated when he can't find something he needs, which is often. He also gets mad really easily whenever he has to put something together that requires assembly or when we're on some type of family vacation and he can't find where we're trying to go. I've literally sworn off family vacations now because I straight up don't enjoy them. My dad likes to drive so we spend a ton of time in the car, but we also spend time a lot of time in awkward moments where he's mad because he's lost.
And then there's me, and I see so much of that in myself. I had a major temper as a kid, and it wasn't until I made my mom cry one afternoon as a teenager (not out of anything physical, just being angry again) that I swore off letting myself get mad about things. But during my last couple years of college, my positive attitude changed and I started seeing a lot of negativity in my attitudes again. I just get in grumpy moods at times and sometimes I don't even know why I feel that way, and anytime I have to put something together it eventually leads to me getting angry. I probably look and sound exactly like my dad in those moments. And just to confess, I got a bookshelf for Christmas that I had to put together, and because I was by myself, I allowed myself one of those angry outbursts and ended up putting a hole in my drywall. It was momentary, but it happened and I felt horrible about it.
I don't want to be that kind of husband and father. I don't want my wife or kids to ever be afraid of me because I couldn't keep my cool about something as silly as a bookshelf or a football game. I hope I never do what my dad just did, even though there was plenty of legitimate and justified frustration there.
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