The user, a single mother in her mid-30s who works in marketing, lives with her 14-year-old daughter and two dogs. Recently, her boss, a man in his early 40s, began behaving differently toward her at their shared workplace after she had been employed there for six months.
The boss started avoiding conversations at work, instead preferring to visit the user’s home in the evenings to talk. While initially acceptable, the user grew uncomfortable, especially after learning other colleagues did not have similar arrangements. After declining an evening visit, the user firmly asked him to stop the home meetings, leading the boss to insist this was his standard practice, causing the user to doubt her reaction when a friend called her request to stop ‘cowardly.’

AITAH for telling my boss I am not comfortable with him randomly visiting my house?









As workplace communication expert Dr. Kim Scott explains in her book *Radical Candor*, ‘The key to good management is caring personally while challenging directly.’ In this situation, the boss appears to be blurring the lines between professional and personal life, creating an environment where the employee feels pressured rather than supported. His insistence on meeting at the employee’s private residence, especially when coworkers are treated differently, shifts the dynamic from mentorship or supervision to one that suggests an inappropriate personal interest or potential power play.
The user’s actions in setting a boundary were entirely appropriate. Her discomfort is a valid indicator that the behavior violates established professional norms. The coworker’s response, labeling the user as ‘cowardly,’ demonstrates a failure to recognize the inherent power imbalance in a subordinate-manager relationship. When a manager requests non-standard, after-hours meetings at a subordinate’s home, it introduces potential risks regarding safety and professional reputation that the subordinate must prioritize over the manager’s preferred ‘style.’
The user was correct to firmly state her discomfort and request the behavior stop. Moving forward, the most constructive step is to document all interactions concerning these home visits and reiterate the boundary clearly, referencing company policy if necessary. If the boss persists, the user should escalate the documented concerns to Human Resources, as the boss’s actions constitute potential harassment or creation of a hostile work environment, regardless of his intent.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.
















The user is currently experiencing significant conflict between her professional boundaries and her boss’s perceived inappropriate behavior, which has been reinforced by a coworker suggesting she is overreacting. Her core dilemma revolves around maintaining her comfort and safety against the perceived professional risk of standing up to a superior who insists his actions are normal.
The central question is whether the user was right to insist her boss stop visiting her private residence for work discussions, or if her actions were an overreaction that risks her job security. Should she continue to enforce this boundary despite external pressure, or should she concede to his demands to maintain workplace peace?







