Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right now, #1.
If you really are being bombarded with non work texts on your personal line, I would address that later at a more appropriate time. Addressing it now right after co worker had health scare seems wrong.
This. You are right on principle but will sound cold and unfeeling.
+1 this whole culture would annoy me to no end but everyone will act oversensitive in light of the context.
I would be no-nonsense with the boss: "I had spotty reception while I was away. Glad it sounds like everything is fine."
That's not firm enough and almost comes across as apologetic for not responding sooner. You owe precisley zero response. If they aren't paying you on the weekends, they have no claim to that time at all.
Anonymous wrote:Yikes. This would also drive me nuts.
I think you are likely to get some responses telling you to have more compassion for the colleague admitted to the hospital, but I'm going to sidestep that.
I would not text your manager back - at least not right away. I'd text them later today/this evening and remind them that you were out of pocket this weekend for a private weekend with your spouse, that's it.
Tomorrow I'd go in and tell your manager that your weekend and family time is precious and you intend to mute the group text on the weekends for that reason. If they press, I'd invoke religion or privacy and reiterate that this is something you need to do for your family time.*
My own work text group is similar and there's almost no time in any part of my week that I want to get 20+ texts on anything.
*I'm basing this on a LDS colleague that I had like 20 years ago who was upfront that he did not work on Sundays - at all. This was law, so Sunday work was not unheard of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yikes. This would also drive me nuts.
I think you are likely to get some responses telling you to have more compassion for the colleague admitted to the hospital, but I'm going to sidestep that.
I would not text your manager back - at least not right away. I'd text them later today/this evening and remind them that you were out of pocket this weekend for a private weekend with your spouse, that's it.
Tomorrow I'd go in and tell your manager that your weekend and family time is precious and you intend to mute the group text on the weekends for that reason. If they press, I'd invoke religion or privacy and reiterate that this is something you need to do for your family time.*
My own work text group is similar and there's almost no time in any part of my week that I want to get 20+ texts on anything.
*I'm basing this on a LDS colleague that I had like 20 years ago who was upfront that he did not work on Sundays - at all. This was law, so Sunday work was not unheard of.
Do not invoke religion unless it is true. Lying to your boss is not a good idea.
—employment lawyer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yikes. This would also drive me nuts.
I think you are likely to get some responses telling you to have more compassion for the colleague admitted to the hospital, but I'm going to sidestep that.
I would not text your manager back - at least not right away. I'd text them later today/this evening and remind them that you were out of pocket this weekend for a private weekend with your spouse, that's it.
Tomorrow I'd go in and tell your manager that your weekend and family time is precious and you intend to mute the group text on the weekends for that reason. If they press, I'd invoke religion or privacy and reiterate that this is something you need to do for your family time.*
My own work text group is similar and there's almost no time in any part of my week that I want to get 20+ texts on anything.
*I'm basing this on a LDS colleague that I had like 20 years ago who was upfront that he did not work on Sundays - at all. This was law, so Sunday work was not unheard of.
Do not invoke religion unless it is true. Lying to your boss is not a good idea.
—employment lawyer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right now, #1.
If you really are being bombarded with non work texts on your personal line, I would address that later at a more appropriate time. Addressing it now right after co worker had health scare seems wrong.
This. You are right on principle but will sound cold and unfeeling.
+1 this whole culture would annoy me to no end but everyone will act oversensitive in light of the context.
I would be no-nonsense with the boss: "I had spotty reception while I was away. Glad it sounds like everything is fine."
Anonymous wrote:Right now, #1.
If you really are being bombarded with non work texts on your personal line, I would address that later at a more appropriate time. Addressing it now right after co worker had health scare seems wrong.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Right now, #1.
If you really are being bombarded with non work texts on your personal line, I would address that later at a more appropriate time. Addressing it now right after co worker had health scare seems wrong.
This. Personally, I have zero interest in being bombarded by coworker-related texts over the weekend, including about Kevin's kidney stone or other health issue.
Anonymous wrote:Yikes. This would also drive me nuts.
I think you are likely to get some responses telling you to have more compassion for the colleague admitted to the hospital, but I'm going to sidestep that.
I would not text your manager back - at least not right away. I'd text them later today/this evening and remind them that you were out of pocket this weekend for a private weekend with your spouse, that's it.
Tomorrow I'd go in and tell your manager that your weekend and family time is precious and you intend to mute the group text on the weekends for that reason. If they press, I'd invoke religion or privacy and reiterate that this is something you need to do for your family time.*
My own work text group is similar and there's almost no time in any part of my week that I want to get 20+ texts on anything.
*I'm basing this on a LDS colleague that I had like 20 years ago who was upfront that he did not work on Sundays - at all. This was law, so Sunday work was not unheard of.