The original poster (OP), a 34-year-old male, describes an ongoing situation where his 32-year-old wife frequently speaks highly of a male coworker named Greg, referring to him as her ‘work spouse’ because he is funny and understands her sense of humor.
When Greg was invited to a weekend gathering, the OP decided to confront the situation by heavily teasing Greg about his close relationship with the wife, greeting him with pointed comments about being the ‘work husband.’ Following this interaction, the wife became upset, calling the OP ‘weird and embarrassing,’ leading the OP to question if his teasing went too far.

AITAH for pretending not to know my wife’s “work husband” was just her coworker named Greg?







As family therapist and author Nedra Glover Tawwab states, ‘Boundaries are the limits we set on what we will or will not accept from other people.’ This situation directly involves the boundaries around emotional intimacy and communication within a marriage, particularly concerning cross-gender workplace friendships.
The OP’s reaction, while framed as ‘petty’ humor, is a clear, albeit indirect, expression of insecurity and a lack of direct communication regarding the ‘work spouse’ dynamic. Labeling someone a ‘work spouse’ often implies a high degree of emotional sharing that can blur professional lines and make a partner uncomfortable, as it did for the OP. By immediately resorting to pointed jabs at the social event, the OP chose conflict over conversation, which shifted the focus onto embarrassing the coworker rather than addressing the marital dynamic with his wife.
The OP’s actions, while perhaps understandable from an emotional standpoint, were not the most constructive way to handle the underlying discomfort. A more effective approach would have been to initiate a calm, non-accusatory conversation with his wife about what the ‘work spouse’ relationship means to her and how it affects him, setting clear expectations for future interactions rather than relying on public confrontation.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.



















The central conflict involves the OP feeling a need to address his discomfort with his wife’s ‘work spouse’ dynamic, resulting in him using passive-aggressive humor directed at the coworker. While the OP sees his actions as a justified reaction to the wife’s established behavior, the wife perceived the interaction as embarrassing and an overstep.
The core question is whether the OP’s intention to playfully challenge the ‘work spouse’ label justifies making the coworker uncomfortable in a social setting, or if the wife’s feelings about the boundary being crossed should have taken precedence. Was this appropriate trolling, or an unnecessary escalation?







