By J. Harrison Reed
Welcome to the lifestyle. Welcome to the show.
Snacks are currency. Being finger-deep means knowing the hierarchy. The top shelf (organic kale chips) is for management. The middle drawer (off-brand Oreos) is for middle management. The true immersion is the bottom bin—the discount pretzel sticks that taste of cardboard and existential dread. Entertainment value spikes when someone “accidentally” takes the last LaCroix. The subsequent Slack thread is the office’s version of the Super Bowl halftime show. finger-deep in ass at the office
There is a specific posture of late-stage office life. It is not the power lean of a CEO nor the frantic hover of an intern. It is the position: one hand buried elbow-low in a bulk bin of artisan cheese puffs at 3:47 PM on a Tuesday, the other scrolling Slack, while a single wireless earbud whispers the third episode of a divorce podcast.
Entertainment, in this context, is not escapism. It is . You are not just working. You are surviving the open-plan apocalypse one crumb at a time. Epilogue: How Deep Will You Go? Tomorrow, when you walk into the office, resist the urge to hover. Do not merely tap your keyboard. Instead, plunge your hand into the snack bin. Let your fingers graze the bottom. Smell the faint aroma of industrial cleaner and ambition. Snacks are currency
You are now finger-deep in it. And there’s no going back. J. Harrison Reed is a workplace anthropologist who once spent 45 minutes trying to fish a wedding ring out of a K-Cup recycling bin. He lives finger-deep in a WeWork.
Because the finger-deep office is real . It rejects the curated isolation of remote work. When you are finger-deep, you experience the full spectrum of human nonsense: the sneeze that mists your monitor, the joy of finding a forgotten granola bar, the horror of watching a colleague clip their nails at their desk. The middle drawer (off-brand Oreos) is for middle management
One earbud. Always. The left ear listens to the client call. The right ear listens to a true crime podcast. The entertainment comes from the leak: when you laugh at a murder joke while your boss is discussing Q4 attrition. Finger-deep entertainment is the risk of getting caught not being fully present.