Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Chris Danforth's avatar

A few casual "what the fucks" surrounding work/personal email...

1) I (and a few others I have talked to about this) have this habit of leaving one or three or four actionable emails unread to keep them in the inbox until they become little anchors of shame and anxiety as the task dies on the vine (meaning that it was likely not very important to begin with).

2) I don't know when it became a normal thing to schedule emails to go out after work hours as a purely performative thing...but that is a real Rubicon to cross in terms of blowing up your personal boundaries.

3) Churn (and their kissing cousin "sprint") cultures can go rot in a ditch somewhere. It's the equivalent of strip-mining your employees.

4) I will never work for another organization that emails me on vacation. If you can't handle a scheduled absence of moderate length without disrespecting that humane boundary, you're a shitty company and you're either malicious or incompetent (or both).

Expand full comment
Debbie's avatar

The amount of email I received in my previous job gave me actual physical symptoms of anxiety. I would avoid checking it, then when I did my heart rate would increase and I’d get short of breath when I saw the number of emails that had accumulated within the past 4, 6, 8, 12 hours or whatever. I could NEVER go more than 24 hours without checking it partially because of my own addiction to managing my inbox I’d developed and partially because the people emailing me (colleagues and students) often expected immediate responses. My email became a location of demand, complaint, and problems I didn’t have the time or capacity to solve. It represented the most difficult and disked aspects of my job, all pushed into one unavoidable list that had to be confronted multiple times a day, even through there were many other in-person aspects of my position. As you stated, I never wanted to be the one holding up a process (though I often was because of my persistent inability to ever get “ahead” of the to-do list my email presented me with). I would say that the effect that amount of email had on my life was one of the biggest reasons I decided to leave my job. I was absolutely not expecting that when I took the position. So...I feel like this conversation is important, because if not for email my career path might look different! Now I have a few different jobs, none of which depend on email in the same way. My physical symptoms of anxiety around my inbox have disappeared. It’s such a relief.

Expand full comment
16 more comments...

No posts