A colleague confessed something to me yesterday that, to be honest, I hadn’t given much thought to.
“I’m sick of people commenting on my lunch!” she said.
“When someone tells me ‘Ooo being healthy are we!’ I then feel pressure to eat healthy the next day. I feel like they’re watching and policing what I eat.”
Perhaps the most interesting thing about her comment was that everyone around her started nodding in furious agreement.
“Yep. You should never comment on what someone is eating at work,” one woman added.
“It’s rude.”
Watch: Things people never, ever say in the office. Post continues.
Of course, I stared at the wall in front of me for the next four hours and did a lengthy mental check of a) if I’d ever remarked about my colleagues’ lunch and b) if I’d ever offered some unwarranted value judgement on what they were choosing to eat.
With a sigh of relief I concluded that I probably hadn’t, mostly because I am not even moderately interested in other people’s meals. I’m far too self-centred.