This morning I came in late to work, mostly because I had stayed up late working on work. One of the staff made a joke that I was sneaking into the office like one of my co-workers. 1 I responded thusly:
I don’t sneak in or out. I arrive just like I leave, with a clap of thunder and the smell of sulfur.
It’s only mildly true. When I walk in late or leave early, I do so without apology. We all have things we have to do, so why pretend otherwise? Not being able to leave work at the office is a gift and a curse. If you start working before you put on pants and eat breakfast, but then walk in a little later, who’s stay this way is any worse or better than another? 234567
Oh, and the sulfur? It’s a glandular thing.
- He tends to sneak in, and then sneak out [↩]
- Well, I suppose an efficiency expert. [↩]
- Then again, I’m pretty sure you’d find my peak efficiency somewhere after a good night’s sleep, a quick jog, a long shower, a short nap, two cups of coffee, and one slice of cold pizza. [↩]
- What do you mean it’s noon? [↩]
- When studying for exams in grad school I essentially became nocturnal. It’s too bad everything’s closed at night. [↩]
- One late evening/early morning my girlfriend and I decided to sew a parafoil kite, but the nearest place to get fabric at 3am was a Wal-Mart 45 minutes away. Amusingly, at that time of day/night/day I was a lot more cheerful than the greeter. [↩]
- See, it’s not that I’m surly in the morning. It’s that I’m surly at night and I’m just more advanced than most people. [↩]