Sept. 15, 2006
 
COMMENTARY: How to Beat Office Boredom
 
By Steve Brewer
Scripps Howard News Service
 
Every job, no matter how challenging, has its ho-hum moments. One sign of personal growth is successfully finding ways to deal with the everyday ennui, the humdrum, the rut.
 
Some people focus on life outside the workplace. Others burrow through boredom by remembering the bottom line. But the happiest workers are those who find ways to turn the tables on tedium, ways to amuse themselves on the job.
 
Recently, I read an article at careerbuilder.com about ways to combat boredom at work.
 
Because the site is devoted to building careers, the article naturally focused on ways to turn disenchantment to your advantage, suggesting such methods as reconnecting with your earlier passion, learning something new, expanding your visibility within your current company, and going on job interviews to remind you how good you've got it where you are.
 
All useful techniques, but it seemed to me the authors overlooked other opportunities. Juicing up the job doesn't necessarily have to focus on self-improvement and career-building. Just the opposite, in fact. Sometimes, what you need to overcome the workaday blues is simply a little fun.
 
Here are Some Fun Tips for Beating Boredom at Work:
 
1. Take frequent breaks. Lunch breaks, coffee breaks, bathroom breaks, smoke breaks. They all add up. Play your cards right, and you can spend your whole shift on break.
 
2. Get some exercise. Just because you're at work doesn't mean you can't keep fit. Try taking long walks around your workplace. As long as you look purposeful and carry a clipboard, your boss will think you're busy.
 
3. Develop a hobby. You've got all those paper clips right there. Why not build something? Doodling can be great fun. You've always wanted to learn to whistle an entire opera.
 
4. Set records for your personal bests. How many times can you clear your throat before you're threatened by a co-worker? How many trips to the water cooler can you squeeze into a single day? Be creative. This is how people make it into the "Guinness Book of World Records."
 
5. Yak on the phone. Everyone loves an employee with good phone manners. Practice on your friends and relatives!
 
6. Staredowns with customers.
 
7. "Gaslight" your boss -- do things that'll make him think he's losing his mind. Every time he leaves his office, sneak in and rearrange his desktop items. Leave fake phone messages. Repeat everything he says. Ask him frequently if he feels ill.
 
8. Two words: Elevator races.
 
9. Trespass into your co-workers' cubicle space. See how far you can encroach before they complain.
 
10. Make xerographic copies of your body parts. An oldie, but always entertaining, especially if you're the simple-minded sort.
 
11. Hoard office supplies. Why do you think your desk has drawers?
 
12. Follow customers or colleagues around, mimicking their every movement. Always a hoot.
 
13. Chatting with co-workers can be entertaining, especially if you make a practice of interrupting them at every opportunity.
 
14. Flirting can be fun, right up to the moment you're called in for sexual harassment. But hey, even that's a variation in the routine, right?
 
15. Liquid lunch. Afternoons breeze by when you're boozy.
 
16. The Internet contains a million distractions, not all of which have to do with pornography. There's also gambling!
 
17. Gossip makes a great escape from boredom. You can get colleagues going for each others' throats while you sit back and smirk. It's like creating your own soap opera!
 
18. Go on job interviews. If you practice the above techniques enough, you'll almost certainly get out of that boring job and into the lines at the unemployment office.
 
Have fun!
 
Redding, Calif., author Steve Brewer's latest book is called "Bank Job." Contact him at ABQBrewer@aol.com.