Damn the workplace turned out to be much more perilous and brutal than I could have ever imagined. We all take our hits but must persevere.
It was an unhealthy infatuation between two people in a volatile place in their lives. I don't see much love in how both parties conducted themselves. Everything I have read about the psychology of love relationships indicates that these two were not being loving to each other. It went both ways.I don’t think Rosebud or JD were good to each other or treated each other in a decent way. If they really loved each other, they would have respected each other’s career and family and kept it professional.
Agreed.The perpetrator vs. victim construct implies that the perpetrator has the power and is the one actively doing things, while the victim is a powerless passive pushover. That’s not what happened here.
That's an interesting hypothetical. I don't know how that works exactly, not that it is utterly impossible. Was her path wide open to an amazing career at Open Stories Foundation? I see a lot of impediments on those paths. If JD did a better job, he did so with a number of distinct advantages, and he still managed to be a pretty big screw up all along the way. Mind you, I don't know that I would have done better than either one of these people in the situation they found themselves, but then I have at least managed to avoid sleeping around and engaging in workplace affairs or anything inappropriate in that way.The fact of the matter is that Rosebud had wide-open paths to an amazing career at Open Stories Foundation. In an alternative universe where JD was acting intolerably inappropriate and Rosebud was acting professionally, then Joanna Brooks and the rest of the board would have backed up Rosebud. But in this universe, JD ended up on top because he did a better job of getting his sh!t together, acting professional, and adding value to the cause. Rosebud could have gotten her sh!t together, acted professional, and added value to the cause. She didn’t, and its her own damn fault.
I do believe, however, that had Rosebud firmly dumped JD and concentrated on her job at Open Stories Foundation, she might have made it OK. She could have done that. She could have put herself in the driver's seat and told him it was definitively over. Had she come to Joanna Brooks having dumped him and having returned to a focus on her work, Joanna Brooks and the board, I concur, would have backed her over an unprofessionally behaving and emotionally erratic JD. The interesting thing is that she did not do that, something that would have exhibited true moral fiber. Instead she sought to eject Joanna with JD's help. I don't see how that works or how that evinces any real professional or moral integrity. "We didn't do anything wrong. She is power hungry. Let's take her out." That's not really the kind of position that helps you keep a job.