104
4w
97

What's your professional deformation?

When reflexes acquired in your job are invading your daily life.

-When i was an intern in a retail, i had to fight against the urge to store the shelves during my own shopping sessions.

otter - 4w

I can't watch anyone cook without steeling myself from mentioning their risky knife grip, mess-inducing lack of flow, slapdash mis, etc. 😵‍💫 On the positive side, I always call my status ("behind", "hot", "knife", etc.)

48
TheAsianDonKnots - 4w

I had an ex that asked me to show her how to cook and then proceeded to have a complete mental breakdown while screaming about how judgy I was being.

Turns out she lived off of turkey on flatbread, plain, every.single.night. We didn’t make it more than a month. My (now) wife went from only being able to bake, to a full on Sous Chef. Most nights I don’t have to say a word, we’re just on a mission to get dinner for 5 ready.

42
otter - 4w

That's romance right there 🥰🤘🏼

20
Che Banana - 4w

Yeah detaching your cheffiness in your personal life is a job in itself, I had OJT all throughout my children's lives until they moved out, THEN my wife and I opened a BBQ joint and it's just her and I and HOOOOO BOY the shoe is on the other foot!!! lol....we have fun.

10
otter - 4w

we have fun

NGL, y'all seem to be livin' the dream! 🥳

5
Che Banana - 4w

oh absolutely, had to leave the US to live the American Dream, and can't say it was a bad decision!

4
otter - 4w

Oh, please do share the how-to on that! 😅 Before it's too late? 🥵

1
Che Banana - 4w

Sold our house at the right time (Trump presidency #1), funded a year & a half in the EU with 'no income' (you need to show income plus have enough funds to show independence -and family send letters of assurance & their bank statements for support, plus private insurance, etc. & patience.

Found an amazing town in 3.months and have been here for 7 years, restaurant opened 4 months before COVID lockdown, the landlord was amazing throughout the whole ordeal, didn't charge the 3 months closure, we paid half rent for the 1st year and were able to repay it within a year). Neighbors were amazing (again) very supportive through the whole deal.

This is when we found out we can do it just by ourselves....the kids then some casual employees PT during the high season. This year we had 2 neighbors kids work with us for their first 'real job'.

Great community, we work very hard but have some awesome quality of life (Mediterranean is 500m away) and more than anything got lucky.

I wish others the same!

4
otter - 4w

500 meters from the Mediterranean?! Luuucky 😱🤩🖖🏼

2
Che Banana - 4w

37 years in the industry, I knew when I was a young cook I wouldn't make jack shit for pay, so I always looked at places where I could enjoy life: N. Florida, Buenos Aires, Bermuda, Bonaire, Seattle, Los Angeles (ok, that was for straight up pay....never again!) now Spain. Hard work, a good partner, and dumb luck.

4
Aeao @lemmy.world - 4w

Not catching things. I worked at a leather shop with a lot of very sharp things.

I will just watch stuff fall. Even if it’s a friend tossing me my keys or something. Watch it sail thru the air and land right on the ground. Then I normally say “don’t throw shit at me” as their regular reminder that my instinct isn’t to catch things.

Also the phrase “heads up” doesn’t encourage me to catch something either. It encourages me to check the position of me feet for possible stabs.

44
codemankey @programming.dev - 4w

I’m a software developer. I get very agitated when I have to sit next to someone who operates their computer slowly.

41
SPRUNT @lemmy.world - 4w

I'm a software tester. I break everything I use whether I'm trying or not.

18
comfy - 4w

­

4
TheAsianDonKnots - 4w

One of my first jobs was in a call center with a scripted greeting using an assertive voice because the customers always tried to dunk on us. My friends and family would laugh so hard when I answered my personal phone with the script/voice.

37
toynbee @lemmy.world - 4w

I used to work in a call center with a very long spiel for answering the phone. I never used it when someone called me, but one time I had a dream that my phone was ringing at work. I woke up (sort of), picked up my cell phone, and recited the script ... Only to finally open my eyes and see I was talking to no one but my befuddled dog.

10
thesohoriots @lemmy.world - 4w

Graduated a couple years ago with an English PhD: when I go to read anything, I always pick up a pen or pencil as if I’m going to annotate it. I still have to hold one but don't click it out, like a security blanket, otherwise I feel immensely guilty.

34
EtnaAtsume @lemmy.world - 4w

Did a literature Master's. Cant not skim unless I'm actively stopping myself from it. Also, the internal literary critic never shuts off, but I think that it's a good thing to always be in critical thinking mode in this day and age, even if it means I can't "it's just a story" anymore.

8
thesohoriots @lemmy.world - 4w

We called that “reading diagonally”

4
runiq @feddit.org - 4w

I'm in IT. My personal laptop is perennially broken because I. cannot. stop. tinkering.

29
codemankey @programming.dev - 4w

Which OS tho?

5
runiq @feddit.org - 4w

Linux. I'm bringing it on myself, though

8
Domi - 4w

This is Lemmy. "Linux" doesn't cut it here.

We want to know exactly which distro, which tweaks, what hardware and how you broke it this time.

20
runiq @feddit.org - 4w

Right, if you insist: Fedora Kinoite, Thinkpad X1 Carbon 4th Gen, some sysctl tweaks for low-latency audio.

Yesterday I realized my password database (which I sync between computers/phones via Syncthing) was broken, because I had failed to regularly manage upgrades for my Syncthing container, and Syncthing had recently released a v2.0. My monitoring was insufficient and so I hadn't noticed the Syncthing container on my laptop hadn't been running since ~September. When I got Syncthing running again, I had already made changes to my password database on all three synced devices, so Syncthing generated a number of password.sync-conflict-<date>-<time>.kdbx files. Normally that's not a big deal because my password manager has the ability to merge two password databases together, but this time around 400 entries showed issues when merging.

So, armed with a big ol' mug of mulled wine, I bit the bullet and started checking entries manually. After a trip to the KeePassXC bug tracker and the merger code, it turned out that the entries only differred in a few seconds in the _LAST_MODIFIED attribute, which can happen when my laptop is a) on battery, which causes the system clock to go a little off when the voltage drops and b) disconnected from the internet so the NTP client doesn't have a change to sync time. Both happened a lot during the months the time my password database had failed to sync -- we had gone to Paris (lovely place, can wholly recommend a visit) and my GF's daughter is in the habit of watching shows on the computer without plugging in the power.

So I shrugged, merged anyway, ignored the error messages, deleted the sync-conflict files, and called it a day. Maybe the wine played a role in that decision, maybe not.

Thank you for coming to my TED‌ talk.

14
statler_waldorf @sopuli.xyz - 4w

Gotta love the shrug "fuck it, I'm mostly sure nothing will go wrong, and if it does, maybe it won't matter”. We've all done it and most of the time we're right. But when we're not...oof.

5
runiq @feddit.org - 3w

Heh, tell me about it. knocks on wood

Nice username btw. :)

1
death_to_carrots @feddit.org - 4w

Can you alaborate on the sysctl tweaks for low-latency audio? I have a carbon gen4 as well.

2
runiq @feddit.org - 4w

Sure. The following are the bits that I'm pretty sure are universal. The rest -- mostly configuring my audio interface -- is IMO fairly specific to my system and can be found in my dotfiles.

  • Limits for Pipewire:
    # /etc/security/limits.d/25-pw-rlimits.conf
    @pipewire   - rtprio  95
    @pipewire   - nice    -19
    @pipewire   - memlock 4194304
    
  • Add the realtime group and grant it access to /dev/cpu_dma_latency so Ardour can prevent the system from going into idle:
    # /etc/udev/rules.d/40-realtime-privileges.rules
    KERNEL=="cpu_dma_latency", GROUP="realtime"
    
  • Add threadirqs and preempt=full to the kernel commandline
  • Disable VM swap readahead since Kinoite uses ZRAM anyways:
    # /etc/sysctl.d/50-audio.conf
    vm.page-cluster = 0
    
  • Set IO scheduler to None for SSDs and NVMe:
    # /etc/udev/rules.d/60-block-scheduler.rules
    ACTION=="add|change", SUBSYSTEM=="block", ATTR{queue/rotational}=="0", KERNEL=="nvme?n?", ATTR{queue/scheduler}="none"
    ACTION=="add|change", SUBSYSTEM=="block", ATTR{queue/rotational}=="0", KERNEL=="sd?", ATTR{queue/scheduler}="none"
    

I'm not using a preempt kernel or anything like that; I've only gotten into audio when Pipewire had already hit the scene and I've found it to be good enough with these settings.

2
Geobloke @aussie.zone - 4w

Used to work in underground mining, every time there wasn't enough light, I'd reach for my cap lamp on my head

We also used left hand drive cars in a right hand drive country and when I went home I'd get in the wrong side of the car

27
mediOchre @sh.itjust.works - 4w

Lol I do this too especially when I'm wearing a helmet while it's dark out. The creeping dread once you realize you don't have a cap lamp then the slow relief after you understand the situation is definitely an experience.

3
mub - 4w

Lol oh dear. I assume you twist the lamp to turn it on. Does it look like you are grabbing an invisible dick and giving it a twist? At least it is dark so no one else can see you.

-3
Geobloke @aussie.zone - 4w

It's a button...

15
mub - 4w

Lol. Pressing a button on your forehead. Still humours. Sry. I'm easily amused.

4
Apytele @sh.itjust.works - 4w

I've been working in high acuity psychiatry for 10 years. I notice when doors don't click shut behind me and if I don't hear a solid click or an electric lock whirring sound I get the urge to check the handle, even at home / in my apartment complex. I can feel people behind me on the street if they're closer than about 20 feet back. I don't like sitting without a wall behind me (it was weird going back to school and explaining that my ADHD preferential seating accommodation was the back row, not the front).

24
Strayce @lemmy.sdf.org - 4w

"behind"

23
Rooster326 @programming.dev - 4w

It's always ridiculed when you say it in your personal life and then they inevitably drop some shit because you're behind them.

13
Strayce @lemmy.sdf.org - 4w

I have been known to say it to my cat though, which is kinda deserving of a little ridicule.

8
Cricket@lemmy.zip - 4w

Decades of working IT in various capacities including a lot of support roles at various levels have led me to usually suspect that anyone coming to to me saying that they can't get something to work is doing something wrong, regardless if it's IT or something else completely unrelated.

This is often combined with me trying to suggest possible solutions whenever someone complains or vents. This one drives my wife crazy sometimes and she's had to teach me that sometimes she just wants emotional support and solidarity rather than possible ways to fix whatever she is venting about.

23
Wirlocke @lemmy.blahaj.zone - 4w

Used to be an Amazon delivery driver. Cursed with the knowledge of what all those stickers mean on my packages.

Also you'll start noticing their massive delivery trucks everywhere.

22
CanadaPlus @lemmy.sdf.org - 4w

Okay, now I'm really curious. What do they say?

17
Wirlocke @lemmy.blahaj.zone - 4w

The yellow sticker usually correspond to what tote they belong in and the order they're in for the delivery route, first thing you typically do is unpack a tote in the truck and sort them by number for ease of access.

My brain wants to trigger this sorting mode whenever I grab my packages, and it just reminds me of that terrible job.

Amazon has a system of desperate contractor companies that are absolutely reliant on amazon since they own the warehouses, trucks, and everything, but are also a moment away from having their contract ended, basically destroying the company. As a result you're not really respected even if your employer tries hard to, they just can't care for employees at risk of dissolving.

15
swab148 - 4w

I worked in a warehouse, they're mostly just storage locations.

7
toothpaste_sandwich - 4w

We're not mentioning the disco sticker, for obvious reasons.

5
YiddishMcSquidish @lemmy.today - 4w

Doing Uber in a very red state, I have to bite my tongue when people bring up politics. It's turned into me not talking about it around friends who share my beliefs for the most part. And it kinda sucks, cause I really did enjoy a good debate.

20
Che Banana - 4w

There is no debate anymore, it's just obtuse mouth hole noises

17
YiddishMcSquidish @lemmy.today - 4w

Yeah, but my income still depends on me not letting them know I'm closer to a communist than whatever they think they are.

9
TheMinions @lemmy.dbzer0.com - 4w

I often donate plasma. Sometimes while stressed I will start to unclench and clench my fist as if I’m donating.

17
tomcatt360 @lemmy.zip - 4w

On the plus side, blood draws at the doctors office are a breeze!

4
kubofhromoslav @lemmy.world - 4w

I want to assume that you are not a heliophysicist 😬

3
abbadon420 @sh.itjust.works - 4w

I used to do order picking in a large warehouse. We used headphones that told you were to go. You could also give verbal commands liek "repeat". So after a week or so I started "repeat"-ing my mom when I didn't hear what she said.

17
treadful @lemmy.zip - 4w

I used to do order picking in a large warehouse. We used headphones that told you were to go.

10
Suck_on_my_Presence @lemmy.world - 4w

So many keyboard shortcuts.

Tab, end, shift+home, del

I delete things en masse that I don't mean to, just out of habit.

16
borokov @lemmy.world - 4w

Do you also have that reflex to do Ctrl+z when you screw something in real life ? Like, you broke a glass, Ctrl+z. Oh shit, doesn't works...

5
drone509 @discuss.tchncs.de - 4w

When I get in the car, I hit the blinker lever by instinct because on a forklift it puts you into forward or reverse gear.

16
SGforce @lemmy.ca - 4w

Oh man, I've done the opposite and slammed the forklift into reverse when going to turn.

8
mesa - 4w

Used to play Trumpet.

I still do the fingerings when thinking about music once in a while.

16
limer - 4w

I make little typing motions with my fingers

15
CaptainBlinky @lemmy.myserv.one - 4w

I've been the electronic security game for about 25 years and I swear I instinctively notice and look directly at every video camera in every building I enter, and I swear if anybody noticed they'd think I'm casing the joint.

13
a Kendrick fan - 4w

Do you look at them to know if they're well place or for another reason?

2
CaptainBlinky @lemmy.myserv.one - 4w

They generally just catch my eye, then I may think about their placement. I've just been working in the field so long it's like an unconscious professional interest I guess.

8
Deme - 4w

My job is to do weather observations every half an hour, or when the situation changes drastically enough to warrant an update. I used to get a bit stressed out about noticing the clock approach one of the routine times while not at work (because that's when I haven't been keeping an eye on the sky so oh shit now I gotta figure it out fast!), but I think I've gotten mostly out of that pavlovian response. Many of my colleagues say that they also get this. But the phone alarm (a manufacturer default) that goes off at that time as a reminder definitely triggers it. Luckily I've only heard it like once or twice outside of work.

13
dohpaz42 - 4w

I still sometimes face the shelves because I’ve been there and I want to show solidarity.

13
solariaseven @slrpnk.net - 4w

I got really used to technical conversations at work going "full duplex" where we'd excitedly talk over each other and interrupt constantly, just to get to each conclusion faster. I had a close coworker join my team, and he was much harder than normal to get a word in, so I got better at jumping in to interrupt until we were at the same pace and the technical communication was synced and flowing well.

Around a month after I'd been working with him, my wife started telling me I was being very rude and interrupting her more than usual. I guess the habit came home with me. I'm still working on it, though it's been over 5 years since I switched out of his team.

12
d-RLY? - 4w

My second job was a bagger at a grocery store, which included getting carts. I tend to just collect them if I pass by some just sitting in parking lots on my way into grocery stores and bring them in. On my way back to my car, if I have a cart but notice the corral is just a mess from people just half-ass pushing them in at just whatever angle. I can't stop from just un-fucking all of them so they are able to be brought back in by workers, or at least so that more will fit correctly. Just really bothers me to see them all tangled up and possibly roll back into the lot to hit cars.

One of my other jobs a while ago was doing lab billing information corrections so we could bill insurance (would take the stuff that was missing random stuff like part of the insurance, diag codes used, and like missing parts of addresses). When I started they said that we would likely see so many insurance numbers/prefixes that we would start seeing prefixes on things like license plates. This was very true (would see the letters at the beginning and be like "UHC" or whatever), and took a long time to not see them.

Though in a personal life going into my professional life (I work on people's computers). I have an OCD kind of habit to just disable all the easy anti-user stuff in Windows settings and add uBO to browsers. Might not even be why the stuff was brought in, but most users don't know to ask (or if things can be done) and either just go through using their PCs without all the random shit, or are just so happy that things run much better. I make a point to note that an adblocker was added so they can ask about it, or remind my peers that do the check-ins and outs to mention them and show them how to turn it off if a site doesn't load something. Also means that I notice when settings get moved around or more anti-user options show up. Which keeps me sharp in both professional and personal life.

11
ShimmeringKoi [comrade/them] - 4w

The unconscious urge to post up in a bouncer position when I'm just waiting for someone in any casual situation. I can't imagine it makes me look like a chill person

11
rigatti - 4w

Not a professional thing, but I played lacrosse in high school, and I now have a habit of kicking anything forward that I drop, since we would practice kicking the ball forward to scoop it up.

10
Nurse_Robot @lemmy.world - 4w

I notice people's gait, stability, and their DME

9
Spykee - 4w

So you are a butt guy.
Nice!!!

3
BenVimes @lemmy.ca - 4w

I'm extremely sensitive to changes in noise levels. Whether it's a very loud and short noise, like a door slamming, or some change in background noise, like a furnace turning on, I'm just acutely aware of it.

9
Frozentea725 @feddit.uk - 4w

What is you job?

5
BenVimes @lemmy.ca - 4w

I'm a sailor.

Ships sound a certain way, even when not sailing. If they ever sound differently, you know something has happened and you'll have to respond to it. Even if it's just a drill, the response is the same.

My sailing days are actually behind me, but I still get tense when I hear unusual sounds in my house or office.

14
Frozentea725 @feddit.uk - 3w

Wow, that's really interesting, I would never assume ships had a sound

1
JohnBrownsBawdy [none/use name] - 4w

Decades later I still sort books when I go to a bookstore.

9
excursion22 - 4w

Former land surveyor. Was definitely counting my paces when I was not surveying.

Background: you'd often try to capture a grid of points, or cross section of a road, for example, at regular intervals. You'd roughly know your normal stride length conversion to metres, so if I were doing a 10m grid, it'd be: shoot a point, walk 11 paces, shoot a point, repeat for hundreds, sometimes thousands of points. It wasn't long until you would be counting paces when you weren't actively surveying.

8
LeeeroooyJeeenkiiins [none/use name] - 4w

I think being a professional cook inculcates or at least intensifies an already present hyper vigilance because there's always something else I could be or should be doing and it's a nearly constant list of tasks and any moment not filled by a task is filled with thoughts of what am I not doing right now that I should be.

At least Christmas music doesn't fill me with hate anymore

8
ℕ𝕖𝕞𝕠 - 4w

Unless someone reminds me to sit, I will eat standing up with a plate in my off-hand.

7
Sludge @sh.itjust.works - 4w

I was previously in management consulting - if I see a ppt, I will harshly criticize the design/through line. I prefer planning heavily via a nicely formatted Excel document/Google sheet.

7
Captain Aggravated - 4w

I'm a pilot. At a drive through, I read back the price as a matter of reflex.

7
comfy - 4w

I'm picturing "Affirmative. Dollar 1299 now proceeding to window, over."

6
Captain Aggravated - 4w

"Twelve ninety-nine, first window." is what usually happens. I'm not the kind of dork that repeats it as "One Two Decimal Niner Niner." The ham bands are full of geezers that'll happily play that game with me if I want.

So, per the Pilot/Controller Glossary, "OVER" means "My transmission ended; I expect a response." Because the communique at the speaker is finished and I don't expect a response, "OUT" would be more appropriate, meaning "Conversation is over, I expect no response." Though on the air you'll often hear "Good day" which isn't in the P/CG but I think is nicer.

6
Jimmycrackcrack - 4w

I rather like the idea of having a word for "the conversation is over, I expect no response." In daily life lol. Feels boss.

7
Captain Aggravated - 4w

"Goodbye" used to mean that, though we've started to take it to mean "our relationship is permanently severed, I expect to never communicate with you again in my life." Which, kind of amazing we felt the need to have a word for that.

2
SGforce @lemmy.ca - 4w

"Smell ya later"

2
flatbield - 4w

There was a time when I looked at LCD screens I saw all the defects.

6
Tier 1 Build-A-Bear 🧸 - 4w

I have stress dreams sometimes and about old jobs. Like in my dream I'll wake up and suddenly remember I'll need to be at a job I haven't been at in years. But, the time has still passed. Like I'll be wondering why they scheduled me when I haven't been there in years, and then get even more stressed cuz I can't remember how to do anything.

Another one, I work from home. Off hours if I'm watching a movie or playing a game I'll sometimes look over to check my work laptop :/

6
nighty - 4w

Biggest one would be trying to login to my pc with my work password.

5
Florn [they/them] - 4w

Bad shoulder from working a McDonald's drive thru window that was too low to the ground

5
eldavi - 4w

i worked for starbucks in the late 90's and the trauma from its popularity at the time still leaves me w nightmares from time to time 30 years later. lol

5
Kultronx @lemmygrad.ml - 4w

entering a home or commercial/retail building and noticing everything that needs to be fixed or maintained, listening for running water around fixtures, etc.

5
FranklyIGiveADarn - 4w

You're probably an inspector.

2
Kultronx @lemmygrad.ml - 4w

sort of. commercial building operator.

3
rozwud @beehaw.org - 4w

Forcing myself not to stare down other people's misbehaving children with the "teacher look" when out in public.

4
HobbitFoot - 4w

Professionally, my ethics dictate that I speak up and force a change whenever I see any action that can lead to a catastrophic failure. This didn't make someone popular.

4
RoquetteQueen @sh.itjust.works - 4w

I worked at a pizza place 15 years ago and I still hear the phone ringing.

4
Kazumara @discuss.tchncs.de - 4w

When riding trains I look at the concrete cable canal running along the tracks thinking about whether we rent any fibers in that one or not.

2