Monday, May 6, 2013

Habits

Everyday I walk into the lab, there's this unreasonably cheerful chicken on a poster, trying to sell me on bullet points that will help me have a "happy day". Why a chicken? Are they the happiest and wisest of poultry? Do they think they know more about productivity and happiness than other farm animals simply because they wake up at dawn and have the self-awareness to question their motives to cross the road? And can I have some for dinner tonight??
I've always found inspirational posters and lists aggravating; it isn't simply not-this-crap-again annoying, but cat-claws-on-chalkboard annoying. Admittedly, this stems from my inability to turn off the "spelling and grammar check" area of my concious brain, but that merits its own post. Is anyone actually motivated by these posters? And if that's all it takes to inpire them to action, I'm just glad there's no song and dance routine involved. The recurring theme seems to be to help the reader become more "productive", which reminded me of the tiresome "7 habits of highly effective people". Highly effective pains-in-the-[anatomical region of choice] for sure. (and no, I did not read the entire thing, mostly because there were no illustrations and I'm definitely not their target audience). So, from extensive practical experience and a penchant for mining the internet for spoofs, I found:

7 habits of highly ineffective people:

1) Procrastination

The bread and butter of counter-productivity. It is no longer enough to simply avoid working. Step up your game, get creative, find joy in every little avoidance tactic, and you will soon find yourself drawing others into this delightful cycle.

2) The planning fallacy

A lack of planning on your part should translate into a monumental code red emergency for everyone else. That's the only way you'll get them to do your work for you.

3) Texting while working/walking/talking/eating

Because you should never procrastinate when it comes to texting. Like, ever.

4) Checking email too much

You never know what little gifts the universe might chuck your way. Maybe the universe has an email account.

5) Relativity in salary

No matter how much money you make, there's always someone who makes more than you but works half as much. If that isn't enough to make you want to give up working, you shouldn't be reading this list.

6) Over-optimism
"Meh i'll do it tomorrow". Repeat this in your mind every time you feel the urge to do something productive.

Put that on a poster, and lie in wait to pepper-spray the guy who writes in point number seven.



captivity

Day 1391 of captivity:
The drones continue to annoy me. The heat doesn't help. Despite the oppressive weather, my mind seems to be lost in some frozen dessert... not the sand variety, the land of sinful dairy products and cocoa concoctions.
The transient state of sanity that I refer to as my "intellect" seems to be trapped in a jello-like limbo, content in going nowhere, mesmerized by the translucent dazzle of artificial pigments, reveling in a wobbly sense of self worth.

Damn, another attack of ice-cream craving.

Saturday, May 4, 2013

reboot

I forgot this was here.
Well, finally a place to house all my random nonsense about PhD life. And to crib, complain, wallow, rant and ramble.

[psst... take my advice and shuffle on over to the "next blog" option]