Background: I have been with my current company a year and a half. In general I like my job and company. I work in a very small office where they build and manufacture machinery. The administrative side of the office consists of me and 5 other people, that's it. I do the accounts payable and I work closely with the gal who does receivables and other duties as well. We are owed by a Canadian parent company and I report directly to the CFO who works in our Canadian home office, so I see him about 2x a year.
My co-worker in receivables whom I work very closely with has a history of belittling me and generally being a little rough around the edges when it comes to dealing with her. She and I have had conversations on a few occasions where I have had to let her know that the way she acts towards me makes me feel horrible and those conversations usually end well and her behavior improves for a short period of time, then she goes right back to her old ways. Most recently, I have taken the attitude of "kill her with kindness" and made and extremely conscious effort to be positive and friendly to her, and take an interest in her work and offer to help when I can tell she is busy regardless of how she treats me... Only to have her basically spit in my face yet again... Most recently on Friday she ripped my head off for asking a simple question acting as if I was stupid for even asking. I walked away from the incident silent but extremely hurt and didn't talk to her the rest of the day. She could tell I was upset and late in the afternoon she said she was sorry. I accepted her apology and told her that I was thankful she apologized because I was very hurt by what she said. I guess she was shocked that I didn't say "oh its okay!" with a smile and act like nothing happened because since then the tension between us has been so thick it's unbearable and resulted in me having a mild anxiety attack yesterday morning.
I want to talk to her but on the other side, I feel there is no point because any change that comes from the conversation will only be temporary. What should I do? Again, it is a very small office and I work very closely with her. Since we have talked about it several time before and things have not improved, should I take this up the chain of command and talk to our boss about it (our boss is the CFO and works in our Canadian parent company office) I know this behavior is not just isolated to me either. Another person in the office has told me that everyone in my position in the past has had the same experiences with her, and he also has been a victim of her bad attitude and often dreads having to talk to her about anything... So obviously this is something she has been getting away with for a while, and she needs to know it is not okay. But I am afraid talking to our boss will make it worse or do nothing at all. I also don't want to be labeled as a taddle-tail or overly sensitive. This has to STOP! What would you do?
Re: What to do next? Co-Irker...
Well, I think what you did yesterday was a start. Clearly talking to her or "killing her w/ kindness" doesn't work. So - yes, one way to "get through" is make it clear when her behavior isn't o.k.
But - I think you need to buck up a little. Instead of getting hurt and not talking to her, the next time she goes off on you, look at her directly and SAY "Speaking to me that way is uncalled for.". Or "How about you come speak to me when you're in a better mood?". THEN walk away (not walk "off" in a huff, but just a "I've said what I have to say, now I'm leaving" way).
If she was shocked to not be told "Oh- it's o.k.", it might also shock her if you stand up to her. It doesn't have to be a fight or a confrontation. Just a simple statement of "that's uncalled for/ come speak to me when you're in a better mood.".
I don't know the history with her, but I would imagine that a part of why she continues to act like this is that no one ever calls her out on it. "Talking" to her isn't calling her out. IN the moment, not accepting her attitude is calling her out. Putting HER on the spot.
Again- you don't have to stick around for a fight.
As far as going to your boss.... honestly, other than having a "bad attitude", WHAT exactly is she doing? how is affecting you/ your productivity? Not that you shouldn't talk to your boss, but you need to really think about how you frame the issue. Outside of "she's not nice to me".
AND what I would actually start doing - document. When she's rude, keep track of when it happened, what you were asking her, and what her response was.
If you do eventually go to your boss, being able to show a pattern of behavior could be really beneficial.
I have a Daughter born 2/26/2013. She is pretty much amazing!