Gratefulness Trap

Everyday, I count my blessings for being able to work from home. My friends and colleagues remind me to be grateful with comments like:

“We’re one of few companies in our country able to pay salaries in full”

“How lucky we are to have jobs still”

“We should be grateful to be able to work from home. Look at the essential workers.”

“Did you hear so and so got laid off?”

I agree 100%. Yes, we are privileged.

But why is that we never talk about the other side of gratefulness.

Probably because of stigmatism. Being labelled ungrateful (gratefulness is so on trend these days). Because I know what people will say.

“How dare you complain when you have a roof over your head?”

“Do you know how many people are willing to work to make the ends meet?

“People are selling their cars to buy groceries”

“My mom is sick but she’s our breadwinner. She still goes to work.”

And on, and on…  

I agree. Yes, we are the privileged few.

But I also believe it is our right to complain. How else are we going to cope?

I am tired of working all the time at a heightened pace where everything is urgent and important. I hate that being grateful is on trend.

One meeting ends and another one starts with a click of a button. I have had to mute to go pee. I get a quick bite to eat in the kitchen, only to run to the desk in my room to answer my boss’s call. I start dinner after 6:30pm, and the phone rings again. When my phone rings after hours, it’s always an emergency. It’s always urgent.

Let me share my day. My Monday is usually hectic. I issued a survey which closed last night at midnight. Other input for this deck came in last night at 4:30. I have less than an hour to put everything together ahead of 07:30 meeting with my boss. After the call, I must make more changes.

Team meeting starts at 9am. One-on-One at 10am.

Do some work. Send emails. Make another change.

11:30. Five hours later after waking up, go pee. Brush my teeth. Wash my face.

My paper notebook tells me what I must do. Left hand side: work done. Right: What I must do. Left goes up at a slower pace than the right. I cannot keep clearing my over-due deliverables. It’s simple mathematics. Work required exceeds my rate of production. The only way to keep it up is working earlier and later. On Friday, I shut down my laptop at 10:30pm. I started producing this morning at 06:30am.

But you see, this cannot continue. The more I do, the more that is expected of me. I don’t mind the challenge, but it’s the same salary requiring more hours and more output at my expense. Literally and figuratively.

My electricity bill has doubled. I’ve had to get eyeglasses from straining my eyes from long hours.

I got paid on Friday, and my bills are sorted. I am grateful for my paycheck.
But I have an internal daily struggle, oscillating between gratefulness and frustration. Happy for a job and paycheck. Frustrated with the workload and never-ending meetings. Unhappy about the doom and gloom job market that will not have the fairy tale V-shape recovery.

Worrying about not being able to get another money printer if I were to quit and rest a bit before joining the workforce. It’s not just the work from home and crazy hours. It’s the impact of the overall economy and impact on the job market. The pressure of feeling sorry for those less fortunate than me. Inability to go out for dinner because of the lockdown. My flights to the USA are suspended. My plans to see old classmates and family have been cancelled. Feeling stuck. Really stuck. Not even able to leave my city.

I wish I could catch my breath and own my time, without anyone rushing me. I hate not being in control of my own time.

I want to press a long pause button. Same movie, but different frame. 

Market leader to no customers

I had a meeting with SAP Ariba Preferred Care representative. The website designed for suppliers looks promising at first, but it is clunky and something out of 2002, not 2020. A small ? button on the top right hides Q&A if you click on it. Like magic. And I don’t know how to get it back. It feels like minecraft but way less exciting.

I ask the Preferred Care Rep to please update the website because it is not user friendly.

Her answer: Log enhancement request. There is nothing I can do.

I see a function that looks useful. I click on it. It opens. It doesn’t work. I ask the lady again.

Her answer: I don’t know. You must be on the list to receive updates.

This is the company founded by Keith Krach in mid 1990s which revolutionized B2B commerce. I used Ariba in 2013 and was impressed with what I saw and experienced. Imagine my surprise 7 years later.

The company is based out of Silicon Valley and owned by SAP. Yet, the website looks like it was made by an amateur in 1999. UI and UX is not considered at all. This from the founder who defined category creation:

“Success is not timing, not a fluke, not good luck. It is simply recognizing the profound patterns, looking for the need, the paradigm shift, assembling the team, and giving them a clear mission.”

The founder moved on long time ago, and the product that once wowed the market is no longer.

One day, you may be the revolutionary or leader in your market, but once you stop improving and forget about your customers, you become a dinosaur and die out.

Oh my back

On Sunday, after 8 minutes of rowing, my lower back pulled a little. I took a 2 minute breather and went back to rowing, to achieve my target of 30 minutes.

Few hours later, I can barely bend and my back is killing me. I have never experienced this type of pain? Try putting on pants when your back doesn’t bend? Hahaha!!!

Actually, I cringed. Ow. I ignored my first rule: listen to your body. Pain is a strong sign. Telling you to stop what you are doing.

This rule trumps the no pain no gain mantra. So I must start over again on my fitness journey. How exciting.

How are you?

I am okay, aside from being stuck with no immediate prospect of seeing family and friends overseas. Airplanes stopped taking off in March 2020, aside from repatriation flights. I am a US citizen with South African residency. My livelihood is here, while my family members are overseas. So I stay here, because home is where the pay check is (for now).

Phase 1.

I wake up. Stare at my laptop until my eye balls hurt. Order glasses. Put glasses on. Drink water. Go pee. Get on teams call. Try to do some work, until I get a phone call. Do that. And go back to my work. Another meeting. Drink water. Go on mute. Pee again. Eat something. Go to sleep. Repeat.

Phase 2.

Do the same but introduce weekend walks. Enjoy birds singing and other humans exercising around me.

Phase 3.

Create home office to separate work from home. Mildly successful until I have to work in the living room again for 2 weeks.

Phase 4.

Phase 1 and 2 with daily rowing at the end of day.

Work. Eat. Drink water. Sleep. Repeat.

Phase 5.

Instead of trying to fit life into work, I am trying to fit work into life. Because work never ends and life is finite.

So far, so good.

Starting over again

No gym, no problem!

I thought I would be able to keep up my fitness despite not going to the gym (gyms are closed).

I thought wrong.

I planned to do my usual squats and other circuit training at home. Three months passed with average daily activity of less than 2000 steps. Sometimes hundreds!

One day, I overindulged myself into a gout. I kid you not. Yes, from a day of too many chocolate bars, and barely moving, my left foot swelled to the size of a Hobbit’s (more on this later…)

Couldn’t walk. Couldn’t drive.

Fast forward a month. I run for 10 minutes without stopping, and my lungs burn like they never did before. I had to stop and rest, fighting back coughing fits.

The run scared me. I have been in excellent shape since 2014. Although I don’t run outdoors often, I used to do enough cardio and strength training to run a 5k under 28 minutes, impromptu.

Now I find myself gasping for air, not able to breathe. I exhaust from a fast walk uphill.

Seriously? After six years of consistent fitness, I am reduced to this? How am I supposed to outrun the corona or zombies if World War Z were to strike?

I was embarrassed with myself. For letting myself go. For neglecting once again the most important person in my life: me.

So I decided to invest in my greatest asset and bought a rowing machine: concept2 model D, world’s most popular model. I have used this brand for 20 years, and it always gives me the best workout.

Surprisingly, it arrived three days later, and I have completed 5 workouts, 3 in a row as of tonight.

I love the way my body glides across the rail as my arms extend, and I gulp for air before my body glides again. My goal this week is 15 minutes or 3km.

I have done this thrice. Two more days to go before accomplishing week 1’s goal of getting back to shape.

Well done me.

The art of finishing what you start

“Why haven’t you updated your blog?” My friend from work asked me.

I hate excuses. They are all stupid. Too busy. Not enough time. It’s hard. Blah blah.

I haven’t done it. I being key. I give my best hours and self to work and others. Leaving me with second best. After a full day of work, I am spent and all I want to do is nothing. Rest. My tank is empty.

I fell off the wagon again. And will do so again! However, as I get back on, like I do now, I learn something new. This time? Put myself first. Nothing can replace me.

Instead of trying to fit life around work, and focusing on retirement savings, fit work around my life. Live my life.