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    Home»Business»‘Colleague-zoned’: How work jargon is seeping into romantic relationships
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    ‘Colleague-zoned’: How work jargon is seeping into romantic relationships

    November 13, 20253 Mins Read
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    One X user named Julia recently shared screenshots of an email exchange with her boyfriend in which she was, in her own words, “colleague-zoned.”

    In the now-viral post, which has over 15.4 million views at the time of writing, Julia penned in the caption: “Sent a document to my boyfriend’s work email so he could print it for me and got colleague-zoned.”

    Julia had emailed her boyfriend a document to print, ending her note with, “I love you! Please print this for me! Thanks,” and a red heart emoji. To which he formally responded: “Julia, thanks for reaching out. I have received your document and printed it on 8″ x 11″ paper. Will deliver to you later this evening to be signed. Thank you.”

    Of course, Julia responded as any girlfriend would. “Are you breaking up with me?” she emailed back. To which he wrote: “Keeping things professional. Just wanted to confirm that I have followed up on your request. Best regards.” 

    Some speculated that his emails are likely monitored, hence the professionalism. “That is a man who is locked tf in at work,” one wrote. Others recognized the screenshots for what they are: a funny bit. And it turns out, many people apparently do this.

    “My favorite time of year is when I email our HOA bill to my husband and he does this,” one wrote. “It’s like professional flirting.” Another added: “Something about office speak with loved ones is so funny.” 

    Julia is not the only one who has found herself colleague-zoned. Another TikTok creator recently shared a screenshot of her text exchanges with her “finance bro” husband. 

    “Just got 2026 HC enrollment presentation. Let’s get lunch/coffee again this weekend and discuss next year,” he texted. “Just sent to our Gmail’s so you can review ahead of time.” 

    As professional boundaries blur and work continues to bleed into our personal lives, it can be easy to accidentally slip into office speak when replying to a personal email or syncing calendars with your partner. You might circle back to Thanksgiving plans or touch base on what day the trash needs taking out. 

    Some take things a step further and purposefully conduct monthly performance reviews of their romantic relationships, or discuss KPIs and OKRs with their significant others to align on future goals. It works for some. For others, perhaps it’s a sackable offense. 

    As for Julia, to assuage concerns over her relationship, she later shared screenshots of a follow-up text exchange.

    “I’m crying. I just looked at my phone for the first time in like two hours. lmao. Are your emails actually monitored?? Or were you just being silly?” she asked.

    Her boyfriend admitted, “No, they’re not monitored at all. I was just being funny.”

    Now entering: the colleague zone.





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