This winter has been a strange one for the Northeast and New
York in particular. We’ve been absent the traditional snowstorms that usually
blanket our area a few times each season. We had a slushy sleet in November
that snarled traffic and quickly dissipated and a few snowfalls that failed to
bring much snow volume.
This past Sunday night we had our most commonplace snowstorm
yet, and the predictions were serious enough for New York City to cancelits public school classes that following Monday.
That Monday morning, with the full weight of a snowstorm
having made its mark on our city, I decided to not have a snow day and went to
work. The snowpocalyspe that had been predicted did not come to pass, at least
not on the roads in Flushing. They were clear at 5:30 in the morning and I went
through my normal routine and got to work in great time.
So many were taking a snow day, it served as extra
motivation to make it into the office. I could have likely remained at home and
few would have blamed me. The buses and subways were less crowded than they
usually are.
Enjoying the relative quiet of the hushed urban snowscape,
broken by the crunching of my office-appropriate rain/snow boots on the un-shoveled
sidewalks, it was a harder walk to the bus stop through the crusted sludge.
A few years ago, a snowstorm that was raging through the
night and into the commuting time of the morning meant that the office where I
worked declared a “work from home” day. It was one of the most productive work
days I have ever had. I managed to draft an 800-word op-ed that morning on top
of all my usual work, and the lack of commuting hell made everyone generally
happier.
The greatest snow day
I ever had was in an April of my elementary school years, when there was a
spring snow storm in the Northeastern U.S. and I got to take the day off from
Catholic School. No more stifling white shirt and blue fake tie with the
stenciled sEs (Saint Eugene’s School, Yonkers, New York) for the day. I waged
war against my own blood kin and neighbors through snowball fights, barricaded
into a snow fortress that numbed my hands and feet, and cherished respite in
the warm caverns of our two-bedroom apartment.
Making it into work during a snow day is an easy way to
prove dedication to your job without doing any extra work. There’s a saying attributed to WoodyAllen that 80 percent of success in life is showing up. On a
snow day that jumps to 95 percent. It feels good to be one of the few and the
brave at the office when things are quiet. In a city as crowded as New York,
you take your quieter times whenever you can.
With today’s technology, the central office as we know it is
due for an overhaul. With public transportation unfortunately on the decline,
people who live only a few miles from their job commute for more than an hour.
That hour can be spent more productively at home, and employees will be
happier. We can’t say the same for schools.
What I fear now is that a deep freeze coming later this week
will create an icy menace on sidewalks and roads, including black ice
that can be harder to see and prepare for.
But no matter what shape our school and office lives take,
the allure of the snow day will not be completely gone. Whether you take it at
home or elsewhere, enjoy the snow day.
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