Generally I am a great believer in the separation of weekday from weekend, which is fortunately possible at my job (in theory!), and which I think helps keep one's mind keener and fresher, and one's feelings happier. So I was worried that this sacrifice of a Saturday morning would take a psychological toll.
Fortunately it did not — what I did not know, though, is what a small hell the week would become. Surely coming in to work on Saturday would be enough? — it was not.
On Monday I went to my ballet class exactly when the working day officially ended, so that I would arrive on time. (I was on time, but not early enough to get changed into my ballet clothes before the class had already begun.) Then I came back after 1.5 hours of it, and worked for more than half an hour, alone in the office except for the cleaning crew. Surely that would be enough? it was not.
On Tuesday I worked until after 9 p.m., so 11 hours. Surely that would be enough? it was not.
On Wednesday I worked until ~6:35 p.m.
Then I went off to play volleyball with the colleagues. I arrived at the park 15 minutes late because I needed to finish things up, and because I insist on walking there, I had just done about 20 minutes of very brisk walking... None of the colleagues were there, perhaps because they had been invited out for drinks to mark the departure of another colleague.
So I went back to work for roughly half an hour.
Then I decided to go to the bar to help say goodbye to the colleague. I took the S-Bahn one station, and since it was already after dark, ended up in the weirdest suburban wasteland I have ever walked in. There was the hulking train station that was half-empty at night with fewer passengers and that glowed in a limited perimeter; streets with few buildings on them and just cars passing through the void; concrete overpasses and traffic cones; forsaken yards full of shrubbery, sand, and metal fencing that people had partly opened; the sound of loud music; and altogether the kind of ambience that would grace any thriller. In daylight I'm sure it looks less worrisome.
Anyway, I had an idea where the bar was, but was perambulating about in a manner which, if I'd been watching it in the aforementioned thriller, I would have probably considered extremely stupid.
The bar was at the edge of the Spree, but a pedestrian path passed between it and the water. It had a gatehouse-like entrance, battle-scarred wooden trimmings, a signboard in front, and boisterous 'youths' inside. The menu, as far as I could read it in the dim light, listed non-alcoholic drinks too ... I set foot inside and was ready to look for colleagues. But a man, who had an 'I've seen it all' air and a Jean-Claude van Damme appearance, was sitting on a stool, and he put out his arm to block me. He politely announced that there was a 6-8 Euro entrance charge. So I forked over the money, feeling that it was far past my bed time and wondering — as he stamped the bar logo on my hand — if this meant I was 'clubbing' for the first time. I vaguely wondered what this building and its purpose were during the East German days.
Inside, a band was rendering 'Our House' in a cave-like stage to one side, bathed in yellow light. People thronged the benches, at picnic tables and I think standing tables nearer the stage, and tucked seats in higher niches in the walls that were part of the theme of the pirate's hideaway. I thought they were mostly in their twenties, and felt at least three years too old for the crowd — like I should have experimented with it earlier in life.
My colleagues were no longer there.
I arrived at home quite late.
On Thursday I worked until 11 p.m., at least thirteen hours. Surely that would be enough? it was not. As I was finishing up, I also discovered that I had to do twice as much work as I'd expected.
But Friday was horrible. I had come in before 9 a.m., I think, delayed slightly because of a late train, so an hour early. Because of sleep deprivation and stress I felt light headed and floaty, but I kept trying to be sensible and considerate. Surely that would be enough? it was not.
By 6 p.m. I had had enough. I think next week I need to take less of a 'quietly sacrificing all my spare time' approach and instead read the riot act to the project managers as reasonably as I can. I think that this will benefit the company, whereas working away in overtime without fixing the underlying problem is well-meant but ineffective.
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