We’ve all been there. It’s 9:01 AM on a Monday…or a Wednesday, appropriately. You have your coffee in one hand and a glimmer of hope in the other. Then, you click the little envelope icon.
EEEEEK!
Suddenly, you aren’t a functioning member of the workforce; you are a marmot at Paradise, Mt. Rainier, staring down the barrel of a “Quick Sync” invite that is definitely not going to be quick.
The Anatomy of a High-Pitched Workspace
According to the experts at the National Park Service, marmots use their ear-piercing whistles to signal a few key things. Funnily enough, their survival tactics mirror our office survival tactics with haunting accuracy:
- Spotting a Predator: For a marmot, it’s a hawk or a coyote. For you, it’s an email from “Accounting” with the subject line: URGENT: TP Report Due
- Signaling Urgency: Marmots vary their tone and repetition based on the threat. Similarly, we vary our “per my last email” based on how many times we’ve already explained the same thing to Todd in Marketing.
- Prompting Immediate Action: In the outdoors, this means diving into a burrow. In the cubicle, this means “Closing work laptop and waiting for tomorrow.”
Tactical Retreat: The Burrow Method
The NPS notes that once the alarm is sounded, the colony members freeze or flee. This is a highly evolved response. When the inbox hits triple digits before your first caffeine hit, “freezing in place” isn’t just a biological reaction—it’s a lifestyle choice.
If a marmot can justify screaming at the sun and disappearing into a hole in the ground because a fox looked at it funny, surely you can justify a thirty-minute “research break” because your boss used three exclamation points in a row.
Why We Stand With the Marmot
There’s a reason that video of the screaming marmot goes viral every time it’s posted. It’s not just because they’re chubby and loud mountain-dwellers; it’s because that shrill, piercing whistle is the internal monologue of every person BCC’d on a 40-message thread about the office refrigerator or lunch-time birthday celebration.
So, next time your notification bell dings and your blood pressure rises, just remember: you aren’t stressed, you’re just environmentally aware. —
Oh, and if you can’t find a burrow to hide in tomorrow, try “Low Power Mode” and a pair of noise-canceling headphones.