I've been at my current job for nearly 3 years. I tried to make it without protection at the very beginning, resorting to dehydration (which only resulted in recurring UTIs) and frequent restroom trips. The frequent trips (on the order of every 20 minutes) garnered the attention of my boss, whose office is across from my cube, though he never said anything. It was the pain and discomfort from the recurrent UTIs (and the fact that I had to wear protection whenever an infection was active) that convinced me to just wear diapers at work and keep up with the fluid intake recommended by my urology surgeon.
I have a small half-size messenger bag, fairly discreet I thought, that serves as a diaper bag. The boss is apparently observant and has noticed that I take it to the restroom a couple times per day. Last week, we were both in the office late after everyone had left. He was on his way out the door, we were talking and he paused a bit, like he was thinking of what he was going to say, and asked about the bag. He asked if I was diabetic (no) and commented that it was a bit big of a bag for that. He asked if it was medical. I said it was a bit embarrassing and that I make a point of it to not allow it to impact my work. From what he replied, I gathered that there wasn't actually a performance issue that prompted him to ask. So I responded simply with 'it is medical, I am seeing a doctor for it, I am not getting much of a result unfortunately.' And I left it at that, no more details, even though he was asking. His words were along the lines of 'if there was something wrong, you would tell me, right?' Hell, what was I going to say--'yeah, that's my diaper bag'?!
I'm not really sure if I should leave this where it is with him or offer more details. If there's not a performance issue, I'm not sure why he would care, actually. It's more the fact that he doesn't know exactly what is wrong now; is blunt truth better than leaving him wondering and possibly suspicious?
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