The Theater of Presence
I am holding the cheap USB mouse just wrong enough that the minuscule movements of my tremor will register as human intent. Not working intent, necessarily. Just *present* intent. The heat of the optical sensor is negligible, a faint red pulse, yet I feel its warmth through the ceramic desk pad, a counter-pressure to the anxiety that spikes precisely when the clock hits 4:55 PM.
My real work for the day-the complex modeling that requires deep, uninterrupted flow, the kind of work that screams ‘I am not available’-has been done for 36 minutes. Finished. Delivered. But that is not what matters. What matters is the Teams icon in the corner, that malignant little sphere of color that dictates my professional worth in two shades: green (Active, present, trustworthy) and yellow (Away, suspicious, slacking off). God forbid it turns gray.
This is Productivity Theater. It’s the highest-grossing, lowest-value production in the modern economy.
We are brilliant actors performing in an office tragedy where the applause is a green dot, and the stage manager is a manager who fundamentally mistrusts any output they cannot visually verify every 6 minutes.
We talk about efficiency, about leveraging technology to free up time. But the actual outcome of these monitoring tools-Slack, Teams, Zoom, time-tracking software-is not the measurement of production; it is the measurement of *performance*. The tools incentivize the performance of being busy, creating a perverse dynamic where activity is mistaken for achievement.
The Cost of Illusion
I’ve watched colleagues write long, superfluous emails at 4:58 PM just to generate a time stamp. I know a guy who sets recurring 6-minute calendar reminders simply labeled ‘Movement’ to ensure he navigates to a new document or refreshes a browser tab right on schedule. Why? Because the knowledge worker’s primary objective has shifted from ‘solve the problem’ to ‘look like you are solving the problem.’
I was once convinced that my problem was structural-that the tools were forcing me into this. But then I met Kendall F. Kendall is a body language coach, oddly enough, specializing in remote communication. I hired her because I wanted to look ‘more present’ on video calls, which is, itself, a symptom of the disease.
Internalized Deficit
“
Kendall didn’t critique my lighting or my posture. She zeroed in on my breathing. She told me, in the kindest possible way, that my shallow, rapid breaths communicated a state of constant, low-grade defensive readiness, even when I was talking about something benign, like Q3 projections.
It wasn’t the tools forcing the performance; it was the trust deficit that had become internalized. I was performing *for myself* at that point, afraid of the silence, afraid of the deep breath.
It’s a cycle. Management lacks trust because the output of knowledge work is intangible. They demand metrics. We respond by optimizing the visibility of effort, not the efficacy of the effort. We create the appearance of progress, which then validates the manager’s reliance on superficial metrics. Nobody wins, but everyone is busy.
The Human Outcome vs. The Proxy Metric
(Dashboard Visibility)
(Genuine Experience)
This focus on clear, positive, human outcomes is why places like Calgary Smiles Children’s Dental Specialists thrive. They cannot fake the child’s smile, just as we cannot fake true innovation.
The Dashboard Trap
The Alluring Green Dashboard (46 Days Straight)
Dashboard Health Indicator
98%
(The metric looked perfect, but the underlying structural flaws were ignored.)
I remember the day I accidentally hung up on my boss. It was 4:50 PM. He was deep into an anecdotal story about his weekend. I was deep into panic. I needed to update the dashboard before 5:00 PM, otherwise the daily metric would fail. I wasn’t listening. I was staring at the clock, my thumb hovering over the End Call button, misjudging the pause in his speech for a concluding remark and hitting the button with such force I think the laptop registered the impact.
The System Over the Superior
He called back immediately, slightly baffled. I apologized profusely, blaming technical difficulties. But the reality was simple: I prioritized the performance of having completed a task over the performance of a conversation with my superior. My body was focused on the system, not the human being.
I hate the green dot culture, but I am still the one who maintains it. That is the necessary contradiction.
What are we actually producing? We are producing vast quantities of anxiety, massive reserves of wasted mental energy, and beautifully optimized dashboards that reflect zero real-world value. We are producing proof that we were present, nothing more.
Measuring Void vs. Visibility
We need to stop measuring how many hours a hand is near the sensor and start measuring the depth of the void left when the real work stops.
If the result is a beautiful system, a delighted customer, or an elegant solution, does it matter if the dot was yellow for three consecutive afternoons?
If the only thing you produce is the appearance of productivity, you have produced nothing at all.
And the worst part is, we are all paying $676 a year, or whatever the actual cost of the system is, to be complicit in our own continuous surveillance.