In the quiet corridors of a state office, where the hum of bureaucracy often drowns out purpose, two friends found themselves trapped in a surreal limbo. Tasked with monitoring plague cases among prairie dogs, their work vanished with the coming of winter, leaving them waiting endlessly for a new assignment that never came. Yet, instead of succumbing to frustration or dishonesty, they chose a path of quiet resistance—maliciously complying with the system to survive a year and a half of purposeless labor.
Their story is a testament to the absurdity of bureaucratic inertia and the resilience of human spirit in the face of meaningless routine. As months stretched into 19 long seasons of nothingness, these women transformed idle hours into a subtle rebellion, challenging the very structure that held them captive while maintaining an unspoken dignity. It’s a tale of endurance, wit, and the strange ways people navigate the void when purpose disappears.

How my friend got paid to find creative ways to sleep for 19 months.































The situation described is a textbook example of organizational slack and bureaucratic inertia, often discussed in public administration studies. As noted by organizational theorist Chester Barnard, effective organization requires both the ability to secure contributions from members and the capacity to maintain authority and communication. In this case, the failure was systemic: the employees followed the literal directive to ‘stand by,’ while management failed in its duty to either create new work, formally terminate the positions, or clearly communicate a resolution after the department was cut.
The friend’s actions, while appearing malicious to an outside observer, demonstrate a pragmatic understanding of workplace boundaries and risk mitigation. They engaged in ‘coasting’ behavior, but critically, they maintained visibility (ensuring security saw them) and adhered to the explicit instruction to wait. Their use of the time for self-improvement (the colleague finishing paralegal coursework) mitigates the ethical concerns regarding simply wasting resources, transforming the idle time into personal capital. However, from an organizational perspective, this behavior indicates a complete breakdown of supervisory control and performance management.
From a professional standpoint, the friend’s actions were appropriate in the context of the flawed directive she received. She ensured she was present and available, fulfilling the letter of the law without creating grounds for immediate dismissal. A constructive recommendation for handling such ambiguous situations would involve proactive, documented communication: instead of passively waiting, the employees could have periodically followed up in writing, requesting clarification on reassignment timelines or suggesting alternative projects. This documentation would protect them further while also forcing management to address the operational redundancy sooner.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.










About 45 years ago I worked as a research assistant in one of the Social Sciences departments, at a high level university (think one or two levels below Ivy League).
























The friend intentionally followed instructions to stand by for reassignment when her primary duties disappeared, resulting in 19 months of paid inactivity. This situation highlights a deep misalignment between the formal employment structure and actual operational needs, where both parties engaged in a passive agreement to maintain the employment status quo until direct confrontation occurred.
Given that the employees upheld their attendance and the agency failed to terminate or reassign them despite knowing they lacked work, was the friend’s passive compliance an act of smart self-preservation, or does it expose a significant failure in governmental accountability and oversight?







