have you ever had to confront a female mob at the workplace? - eviltoast

title may sound funny to you, but I couldn’t come with a better one.

I work in nursing, which is 95% female operated and at my unit they behave like the borg:

due to a sloppy wound job by another nurse I exclaimed ‘fuck’, which offended a female coworker.

First she told me I’m not allowed to use that word but then started to tell her friends with her phone. The next day I have several female coworkers aggressively confronting me about said word, yelling me not to use it, but they do it while I’m giving report. They don’t listen to it, play with their phones and then explode yelling at me.

I yelled back ‘let me work’ 5 times, but they kept yelling about the word ‘fuck’. At that point I simply read my report out loud and left the unit.

Notice that I did give report, so nobody can accuse me of patient abandonment.

It has never happened to me that so many women banded together to mob me, not at a workplace. I always expected people to be rational, to ask the accused part for his side of the story, but these women chose to believe their friend, another woman, and won’t even ask me why and under what circumstances I used the expletive.

They act like I told this colleague to fuck off instead of simply exclaiming fuck.

I’ll contact the union with my side of the story.

My main question is: how do I react each time a female colleague accuses me of being dangerous and repeats what their friend said, not even asking for my side of the story?

I still don’t know how saying, not even yelling ‘fuck’ due to a poor wound dressing can trigger so many women.

  • growsomethinggood ()@reddthat.com
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    25 days ago

    Is there a reason you have characterized this incident as a gender issue?

    Was the poor work the work of the nurse who heard you and chewed you out? Do you often criticize the work of your coworkers in a nonproductive manner, expletives or no?

    Did you say anything else before saying “fuck” to your coworker, or before she chewed you out? Do you think you were on good terms with her before this incident?

    Are you listening to the specifics of your coworkers’ complaints? What are they asking you to do differently?

    • Randomgal@lemmy.ca
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      25 days ago

      He said “I want to” and added “you” afterwards, that would explain the trouble he is in.