This past Sunday I checked an email icon on my phone and saw
that a work client had emailed me and several of my coworkers at 10 p.m. on a weekend
night. The hilarious irony of it is that the email is about email protocols. I
was not inspired to read the email of course. It can be read the next business
day like most email.
But this email did inspire me to turn off my work email
notifications on my smart phone. I can still read work emails on my device, and
I understand there are times I may have to, but if some emergency happens
people can call me—everyone at work who has ever gotten an email from me has
both my work phone number and cell phone number in my email signature. I’ll
listen to the voicemail and decide if it’s worth my time.
So the weekend email about email has inspired me in a way I
hadn’t thought it ever would. I may be racking up lots of work emails on my
phone and I won’t know about them until I check that email specifically. I’m
done looking at my phone so often that I’m missing things in the real world. Stop looking at work emails on your phone unless your computer
is broken.
I work for a public relations agency. In most jobs, some of
the people you deal with are good and some are toxic crap, and the PR game is
no different. There is no shortage of self-important imbeciles who seem to make
it a point to call you at 5:30 on a Friday evening or send you emails on
Friday, Saturday, or Sunday night.
Very rarely will there be something that comes up after
hours that requires a response. I can think of only one time over the past two
years, and it was not really an emergency and it was already handled by other
people before I had a chance to respond. I think the reason some people make it
a point to email and call at odd hours is to rattle you, to infect your
thoughts and to give them attention they can’t earn legitimately. It’s trying
to assert a control and project an urgency that is by its very premise sleazy
and disrespectful.
With the advent of services that allow you to send emails at
a future date and time, the after-hours and weekend emails are unnecessary if
not outright offensive. If you’re sending work emails over the weekend, you’re
not telling the world you work hard, you’re telling the world you’re an
asshole.
My policy is that if a client’s CEO kills a hooker, then
I’ll answer your calls after hours. Otherwise it can wait until the next business
day. There are people I know with jobs that require nights and weekends. These
are doctors and first-responders. When a fire breaks out or a plane crashes, no
one sends an email or a group text about it. They use the damn phone.
Maybe this attitude will get me fired. But if I get fired
for not working nights and weekends, I’ll be the better (if poorer) man for it.
I refuse to be a zombie answering slavishly to a mobile device.