According to an Australian publication, “Research shows that about 70 per cent of workers have had an office fling at some stage, one-in-four with a colleague who was married or in a long-term relationship.”

Initially, I felt bad being in the 30 percent who has never had an office affair. Never mind that my first office was full of women in their 50s, my second was teeming with rabbinical students and the home office in my apartment is no way to meet anyone, let alone married men…

But then I read the following:

But beware: if you are a woman involved with a married colleague, you will end up getting burnt. “It almost always ends in tears,” said Geoff Carter, a senior lecturer in management at Griffith University, Brisbane, who conducted the research.


First of all, mildly interesting to me that they use the term “burnt” Down Under. (But you know me. I’m language-obsessed.) Secondly, why would I want to get involved in something that had been researched and proven to “almost always” end in tears? I mean, most relationships do to begin with, and certainly most of my recent choices have “inspired” tears before they’ve even started, so I like to think of that as cutting out the middleman. Pre-emptive crying, if you will.