Or maybe, sometimes it's just flat out dull work.
And it has to get done, you're the one with the capacity to do it, and you just have to grit your teeth and do it.
Unless you work on a dysfunctional team and any non-tracked work is forbidden, and any work you try and get tracked requires 6 pages of justification and takes 10 weeks to get prioritized enough for someone to work on...
who's working at a boring job nowadays as a software dev? everywhere i see devs are wearing like 10 hats bc we have the combination of being capable yet still at the bottom of the totem pole.
I feel like "tension" has negative connotations. Maybe it's just me. I like "friction" better in this context.
There are so many opportunities for improvement, I'm never bored. My aim is to leave this place better than I found it. Even tiny improvements compound over time.
> Your CI/CD takes a huge amount of time because you forgot to leverage caching.
The bane of my existence are CI/CD systems that get caching 99% right. Chasing down the problems from that last 1% of strangely busted...well, lets just say that if you want TENSION at work, good way to get it. :/
I disagree. Boring work needs meaning, not tension. Some times boring, done consistently, is where the truly great things come from.
Tension is, imo, ephemeral. If you keep chasing it, you are chasing dopamine loops. Little good comes from this.
But meaning is different. When you can remind yourself a truly great "why" you are doing something, can re-frame it, it can help.
Most importantly, boredom, irritation, and anxiety are temporary. They are emotions. They do not define us or the work. It was a joy when I realized that all these emotions will pass. They really do. You can sit with it. You really can. You can't make it go away, but it will pass.
Find joy in the craft, don’t rely on the outside world to feed you excitement. A well-crafted wooden box can spark as much joy as a well-crafted piece of software or a well-written document.
Taxes are boring, no kid at kindergarten states they are going to be tax advisors when they grow up, yet tax advisors exist and they do not all despise their jobs, because doing your job well can be intrinsically motivating.
In the 1950s through the beginning of the 1970's the government (ARPA) was paying young scientists and innovators to do their PhD thesis' in computer design to create the next generation of human oriented computer interfaces. Now we have articles talking about how shit it is to work with computers. What the fuck man.
I always find fun and comfort in imaging my work as part of the lore of a medieval saga. Think of being a character in Lord of the Rings or Game of Thrones - no matter how big or small - and the role your actions play in the larger story. Side quests are welcome.
In 2025, if you're bored at work then you're probably expendable, so there's your tension.
Boring work needs automation, not tension. Free up time to work on things more valuable and rewarding. Don't assume that just because you were hired to own service X that it means you can't peek out of your box. If you get it to the point where it's self-managing, look around at other people's needs before adding artificial requirements. You'll learn more, work with more people, get more recognition, and likely be more energized by the work.
Ah yes, what most jobs these days lack is tension! Too bored? Get yourself worked up over some other task! What an insight!!!
>If you can’t tackle these at work, do it in your personal projects.
Just gold analysis. Most people in SWE have plenty of personal projects supported by their work managers and encouraged to implement work tasks into personal projects.
"Watching [movies] is fun because you can imagine yourself resonating with a character."
Perhaps I'm just an unusual type of person, but there are very few movie characters that I "resonate" with. Far more common is thinking "why are you doing that, you idiot?" or "what a jerk! Just tell them the truth."
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[ 3.3 ms ] story [ 41.4 ms ] threadThere are so many opportunities for improvement, I'm never bored. My aim is to leave this place better than I found it. Even tiny improvements compound over time.
The bane of my existence are CI/CD systems that get caching 99% right. Chasing down the problems from that last 1% of strangely busted...well, lets just say that if you want TENSION at work, good way to get it. :/
Tension is, imo, ephemeral. If you keep chasing it, you are chasing dopamine loops. Little good comes from this.
But meaning is different. When you can remind yourself a truly great "why" you are doing something, can re-frame it, it can help.
Most importantly, boredom, irritation, and anxiety are temporary. They are emotions. They do not define us or the work. It was a joy when I realized that all these emotions will pass. They really do. You can sit with it. You really can. You can't make it go away, but it will pass.
Taxes are boring, no kid at kindergarten states they are going to be tax advisors when they grow up, yet tax advisors exist and they do not all despise their jobs, because doing your job well can be intrinsically motivating.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sketchpad
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NLS_(computer_system)
Boring work needs automation, not tension. Free up time to work on things more valuable and rewarding. Don't assume that just because you were hired to own service X that it means you can't peek out of your box. If you get it to the point where it's self-managing, look around at other people's needs before adding artificial requirements. You'll learn more, work with more people, get more recognition, and likely be more energized by the work.
>If you can’t tackle these at work, do it in your personal projects.
Just gold analysis. Most people in SWE have plenty of personal projects supported by their work managers and encouraged to implement work tasks into personal projects.
Perhaps I'm just an unusual type of person, but there are very few movie characters that I "resonate" with. Far more common is thinking "why are you doing that, you idiot?" or "what a jerk! Just tell them the truth."
I'll see myself out...