The chapter opens with a discussion of workplace romances between co-workers. The narrator asks the reader to imagine that he and his co-worker are engaged in a romantic relationship. He wonders if the other workers are putting their personal feelings aside for their work. He also wonders if they are steering the project in the right direction. He asks if this is because they are "blind faith" in a woman who pours all her "vengeance" into her work. The other workers, he says, are falling in love with the woman. He tells the reader that he respects her for her devotion to her work, but he does not care what the reader thinks. He says he has reasons to want to work with the other women, and he is not trying to "rile me up" or "call me out" on it. He is just trying to put his faith in the woman he works for. He calls her a "god" and says she is a normal woman who "pours all her got" and "it pisses into work" . He adds that he is putting his "faith in" the woman because she "falls in love" like anyone else. He then asks if the reader is getting "emotional" right now, and the narrator replies that anyone would get "emo tional" if they stomped over the feelings and "shit" of the person they cared about. He goes on to say that his friend is his "boy friend" and that they are super-vising the man's brand right now. He points out that he was hoping to learn something from his passion for his work and his experience working in, but the way he talks about workplace romance has made him lose respect for him.
The chapter opens with a discussion of workplace romances between co-workers. The narrator asks the reader to imagine that he and his co-worker are engaged in a romantic relationship. He wonders if the other workers are putting their personal feelings aside for their work. He also wonders if they are steering the project in the right direction. He asks if this is because they are "blind faith" in a woman who pours all her "vengeance" into her work. The other workers, he says, are falling in love with the woman. He tells the reader that he respects her for her devotion to her work, but he does not care what the reader thinks. He says he has reasons to want to work with the other women, and he is not trying to "rile me up" or "call me out" on it. He is just trying to put his faith in the woman he works for. He calls her a "god" and says she is a normal woman who "pours all her got" and "it pisses into work" . He adds that he is putting his "faith in" the woman because she "falls in love" like anyone else. He then asks if the reader is getting "emotional" right now, and the narrator replies that anyone would get "emo tional" if they stomped over the feelings and "shit" of the person they cared about. He goes on to say that his friend is his "boy friend" and that they are super-vising the man's brand right now. He points out that he was hoping to learn something from his passion for his work and his experience working in, but the way he talks about workplace romance has made him lose respect for him.