
There's got to be more to your working day than loafing around the internet, says tfi049113. How do you fill those long, empty desperate hours?
( , Thu 8 Jan 2009, 12:18)
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In relation to earlier posts, in which I mentioned livening up the day by doing class A's I thought I should explain why it got that bad.
I should point out it was a 45K+ job, in a very nice office, in a technical environment with lots of nice clever people who i didnt really know. I'd worked in the southern office for years but transferred to the northern one when I moved house.
I looked after some pretty serious shit. We ran a system for various telco's that made them a lot of money. To those who understand these things, we usually exceeded 5 9's availability. In the 0.001% of downtime or less, we lost a lot of money for the client, so we bought some serious kit.
And unlike a lot of IT systems, it was bleddy good. And it never went wrong. In fact, I had nothing to do. The management believed that it was fantastically complex (it must do, it cost a million quid to implement) but in reality it was 3 very high end servers and one application. It just worked.
I worked with Spotty and Fatty. My desk was in a corner, in the middle of the office. That is, an artifical corner formed by 2 large grey partitions. We formed an island in the room.
One day, something was bothering me on the way home. I realised, that for the first time ever, my phone had not rung once. Also, I had not recieved ONE work related email.
I had found the perfect job.
The next day, I paid attention closely. Not one call. Not one work email.
This continued for 5 days. My mind started playing tricks. I decided that next week, I was going to do something else.
On monday, I decided that I would do nothing for one hour. I would sit still. It was frighteningly difficult.
After about 2 weeks of this, and almost 4 weeks of doing nothing, I could sit still for an entire morning, and not touch keyboard, pen, phone, anything.
My only respite was the toilets, I perfected going in with a nice big coat on. I used it as a pillow. I once slept for 2.5 hours and woke up in pitch black, as the lights had timed out.
On the way home one day, I realised something was wrong. I was going mad. Or at least I thought I might be. I realise you cant *know* you're mad. But I was defintitely a bit a mental. In retrospect, I was becoming depressed I think. Alan Partridge would call it "clinically fed-up". I was so bored, it was actually making me ill.
I decided to introduce my weekend habit to the workplace. ie taking coke to the office, stashing it and using it throughout the day. I did this for about a month.
My job came up for interview in one of those "lets all interview for our own jobs" things. Not once person applied for mine. Except me. I did the interview off my tits and god knows how they didnt spot me jabbering on endlessly, sweating, twitching, chewing the non existant chewy,drumming fingers, talking about football for 5 minutes.
I got the job. Which sucked, because i already had it, and it was shit.
I handed my notice in. Worked a week and phoned in sick for three. I stopped doing drugs and have never touched them since. (Ok thats a small lie but not very often).
Dont go mental kids, its not that great.
( , Fri 9 Jan 2009, 11:32, 5 replies)

find something else that was of interest to you to do instead of work, at work? that way you would still be paid while doing something for yourself.
like i don't know, develop some sort of game, or do a PhD, or take up knitting
( , Fri 9 Jan 2009, 12:17, closed)

i would have. In retrospect, i wasnt quite right at the time.
( , Fri 9 Jan 2009, 12:20, closed)

May I have that job, pretty please?
I'd happily be that bored for £45k. Hell, I'd take that job for half that.
( , Fri 9 Jan 2009, 18:15, closed)

But trust me I'm in a similar boat and the clinically fed up bit is spot on.
Its great to do nothing for a couple of days... and then the madness sets in.
( , Mon 12 Jan 2009, 13:24, closed)
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