Source: HaytersTV

Emma Hayes is receiving backlash for stating that intrasquad relationships are inappropriate. By relationships, I believe she means dating or marriage and not something else. Quite frankly, Hayes has a point. There are many pitfalls when a romantic relationship goes south. There’s gossip, possible sexual harassment complaints, and so forth. Your at your job to do a job. Just like many work coaches state that your coworkers are not your friends and that such interactions can lead to a toxic work environment, office romances tend to do the same.

What many forget is that a professional sport is still a profession. It is work. As such, it needs to have the same professional boundaries that every other profession has. Coworkers are coworkers not friends or family. Don’t confuse work relationships, or a company’s philosophy of “family,” to manipulate your life. Work-life balance must be maintained for overall wellness and that means a life totally separate from one’s work.


Source: Jennifer Brick

Like one commentator stated after one of the following videos, “Never get your honey where you make your money.”


Source: Emmotion by Marat


Source: The Style O.G.

Every one had an opinion regarding Kim Mulkey not commenting on why Angel Reese wasn’t playing for LSU. Every one speculated on what happened that Corey Perry was relieved of his duties with the Chicago Blackhawks. What most of everyone did not realize that perhaps those matters where just none of any of our business.

But instead of accepting it was not our business, people had some pretty wild speculations about both Angel Reese and Corey Perry’s absence from their respective teams. For instance:

Sometimes, we as fans act like the coworker who knows no boundaries. Like the coworker or toxic neighbor who feels he has to be your friend, we comment, complain and dig when we should minding our own business. Athletes, like other celebrities, deserve some privacy. Yes, fame does come with quite a bit of public knowledge about one’s personal life. Yet, there are times when our–meaning fans–noses need to stay out of grown folks’ business. Everything is not for our consumption. Like Rev. Dr. Howard-John Wesley said in the sermon below, we just don’t need to know.

 


Source: Alfred Street Baptist Church