The Theater of ‘Pre-Meeting Syncs’
My left eye is twitching in sync with the mute button’s rhythmic blue glow. It’s 4:06 PM on a Wednesday, and I am currently drowning in the shallow end of the corporate pool. We are 46 minutes into a ‘pre-meeting sync’ designed to ‘align stakeholders’ for the ‘actual’ meeting scheduled for tomorrow morning. There are 16 faces on my screen, most of them illuminated by the cold, pale light of secondary monitors where I suspect they are doing the same thing I am: pretending to listen while frantically clearing out an inbox that has somehow ballooned to 236 unread messages since lunch.
“I had a minor crisis earlier today. Right in the middle of a high-stakes presentation… I developed a case of the hiccups. Not just a tiny, polite hiccup… but a full-chested, violent spasm that sounded like a distressed seal. It was the only honest thing that happened in that room all day.”
– The Unmanageable Truth
The hiccups didn’t care about my 6-point plan for synergy. They were real, they were disruptive, and they were utterly unmanageable. This is the state of the modern workplace: a vast, interconnected stage where we spend 76% of our time performing the role of ‘Productive Employee’ rather than actually producing anything.
The Molecules Don’t Care About Status Updates
I recently spent time with Maya K.L., a fragrance evaluator whose daily life is the antithesis of this performative nonsense. Maya doesn’t have a LinkedIn profile that glows with endorsements for ‘strategic leadership.’ Instead, she spends 6 hours a day in a white-walled room, smelling molecules. She can detect the difference between a natural Bulgarian rose and a synthetic substitute designed in a lab 1,006 miles away.
Maya’s Focus vs. The Performative Gap
Smelling (80%)
Talking/Updating (20%)
‘The molecules don’t care about your status updates,’ she said, swirling a glass of amber liquid that had nothing to do with fragrance and everything to do with her appreciation for things that take time to mature.
“We are so busy building the scaffolding that we’ve forgotten to build the house. We are exhausted by the effort of looking busy.”
66
Threads resolving nothing.
The Psychology of the Actor
This theater isn’t born of laziness… We are exhausted by the effort of looking busy. It takes more energy to fake a result than it does to achieve one, yet our systems are optimized to reward the fakery. If you finish your work in 2 hours and spend the next 6 hours reading a book or thinking, you are viewed as a liability.
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We are desperate to touch something that hasn’t been filtered through a project management software. We want something that has been aged, crafted, and perfected by hands, not by committees.
I think back to my hiccups… For 6 seconds, I couldn’t control the narrative. I was just a human being with a spasming muscle. The theater was momentarily paused. And in that pause, I saw the faces of the regional directors. They weren’t angry. They were… relieved. We all shared a laugh that wasn’t ‘synergistic’ or ‘aligned.’
The Corporate Architecture: Rewarding the Screen
Real ideas don’t emerge during the 6th slide of a deck. They emerge in the shower… But our current corporate architecture has no room for the window. It only has room for the screen.
Initial State
Anxiety over the gray dot (Inactivity Fear)
The Turn
Finished 16 pages of strategy that actually made sense.
If we continue down the path of productivity theater, we will eventually reach a point where the theater is all there is. The mission becomes the performance itself.