This Was Not Addressed In The Workplace...
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This Was Not Addressed In The Workplace... By Dan Reinhold
So you're working at home now! No more of those annoying
workplace issues that have filled several volumes of
professional journals. They're all behind you, a faint,
unpleasant memory. Of course, working at home has no
such...challenges?
No one looks over your shoulder. No one monitors your output
from afar. ( I was looking for the way out of that
website...really!!) No warnings or veiled threats about too much
time at the water cooler. BUT...
There is one issue, one factor, one paradigm, one contingency,
one concern never addressed, nay, not present in that
organizational outhouse.
Its destructive influence has been well recorded, yet they
continue to be commonplace. They are not found in the corporate
world because of the dangers inherent in their continued
presence. Volatile, unpredictable and thoroughly
incomprehensible, they are the greatest challenge of working in
your home and they're always there!!
Among many names bestowed upon them (some less than
complimentary) throughout recorded time, they are known to us
as...children.
Of all the horrors imaginable, they are the worst because their
minds hold only one thought: You're home.
What project, with looming deadline, impossible demands and
voracious time-consuming appetite, ever frustrated your best
efforts more than a five-year-old opening your door punctually
every four and one quarter minutes to announce, "I wanna
_________?"
Do you ever recall conversations of this kind during a
performance review?
"Milquetoast, we are in agreement, then, then your primary goal
for the next quarter is to successfully address the concern of
little Jennie's incessant attention-getting behavior as well as
Montague's single-handed defacement or demolition of several
pieces of valuable furnishings and pets?"
As I sat writing today, I was visited by my youngest son,
Nicholas. He is three years old and will turn fifteen in June.
Having left my door ajar while he played in the next room (" And
about your child emergency reaction time, Milquetoast..."), he
appeared beside me with an air of quiet resolve that would have
made Churchill shudder, several books held tightly in his arms.
Fixing me with a steady gaze, he firmly stated, "Read to me." My
first reaction was the SOP for child demands as written in the
official Parents' Manual. "I can't read to you now, Nicky.
Daddy's working." He is a highly intelligent and perceptive
young fellow who could plainly see that his father was poking at
the computer keyboard (as he has done) while wearing old jean
shorts and sipping lemonade. It was perfectly obvious to him
that I was not working. He then replied with the SOP for Parent
Refusal of Demand as written in the official Children's Manual.
He raised the volume. "Read to ME!" By this time, my poking had
stopped and my lemonade was becoming warm and watery. As the
exchange escalated (parental authority - stubborn demand -
parental bargaining - stubborn demand - parental pleading -
stubborn demand...), the true underlying objective was achieved.
My productivity had been shot to pieces. After this episode had
concluded ( you know, that Dr. Seuss was a very succinct
expository writer), I realized how ill-prepared I'd been by the
corporate world for such encounters. When my oldest boy was
little, I worked in an office in a big city an hour's commute
away. Working at home has proven to be very different in many
respects than working away from home.
I wonder if there are any professional journals about this sort
of thing?
With two boys, a dog, a cat, a wife and a household to keep
together to boot, Dan Reinhold is the editor of WAHumor to hang
on to his sanity by showing how insane the work-at-home
community can be. Work at home? You deserve a laugh!
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