My office romance turned into a marriage - here are 13 rules for dating a coworker

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Samantha Lee/Business Insider

Before we were married, my husband and I worked together.

Quick backstory: We didn't meet on the job. In fact, we had been dating for almost four years before we ended up at the same company (which, by the way, wasn't planned … long story). But for about 12 months, we sat three cubes apart from one another and kept our relationship under wraps.

That's right: Nobody knew we were a couple.

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"Nobody knew?!" "Wasn't it hard to hide?" "Isn't that illegal?" 

Those are questions we're frequently asked when we tell people the story of our office romance.

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My answer to all three: "Nope - because we followed the rules." 

The truth is, office romances are tricky and generally not recommended. But they happen all the time, and when they do, there are three possible outcomes: The relationship turns sour and your reputation and career take a beating; it ends, but you're both mature and cordial and don't let the breakup affect your work; or things work out.

A new survey from CareerBuilder revealed that nearly 40% of employees admitted to having a romantic relationship with a coworker, and about one-third of office relationships result in marriage. 

It's up to you to figure out whether pursuing an office relationship is worth the possible consequences, good and bad. If you decide it is, there are a few "rules" you'll want to follow to ensure things don't go awry: