Confessions of a Serial Email Overthinker

Confessions of a Serial Email Overthinker

I come to you today not as a master of email communication, but as a humble servant, a mere mortal who has spent far too many hours agonizing over the perfect wording of an email. Yes, I am a serial email overthinker, and I'm here to share with you the trials, tribulations, and comedic mishaps that come with this dubious honor.

Let me set the scene: it's a typical day in the office, and I find myself faced with the daunting task of composing an email. Seems simple enough, right? Wrong. As a serial email overthinker, even the most mundane message becomes a Herculean feat of linguistic gymnastics. Should I start with a friendly greeting or dive right into the matter at hand? Is "Regards" too formal? Is "Best" too presumptuous? The possibilities are endless, and so begins the downward spiral into the email rabbit hole.

Take, for example, the time I found myself drafting an email to a client requesting feedback on a project. Hours passed as I painstakingly crafted and re-crafted each sentence, agonizing over every word choice and punctuation mark. Should I use "please" or "kindly request"? Is "thoughts?" too informal? By the time I hit send, I had rewritten the email so many times that I no longer recognized my own words. The response? A simple "Looks good, thanks!" Talk about anti-climactic.

Then there was the infamous incident of the accidental "reply all." Picture this: a harmless office-wide email thread about the upcoming company picnic. Innocuous enough, right? Wrong again. In a moment of sheer panic, I accidentally hit "reply all" instead of "reply," and suddenly my candid response about the questionable quality of the potato salad was broadcast to the entire company. Cue the frantic damage control as I attempted to explain away my culinary critique with a hastily composed apology email and a vow of eternal silence on all matters potato-related.

But perhaps my most embarrassing email blunder came during a job interview. Eager to impress my potential employers, I spent hours crafting the perfect follow-up email, meticulously detailing my qualifications and expressing my gratitude for the opportunity. Imagine my horror when I realized, moments after hitting send, that I had misspelled the company's name not once, but twice. The shame, the horror, the overwhelming desire to crawl under my desk and never emerge again.

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!

So there you have it, dear reader, a glimpse into the chaotic and often comedic world of the serial email overthinker. Despite the countless hours wasted agonizing over the perfect wording of an email, I wouldn't trade my overactive email-anxiety for anything. After all, where's the fun in sending a perfectly composed email on the first try? As they say, it's the journey, not the destination, that truly matters. And if that journey involves a few embarrassing typos and accidental "reply all" disasters along the way, well, so be it.


Sajit Nair

A bloke who finds joy in exploring areas where he fits 'within' the Bell Curve & those where he is 'without'.

6 个月

' I see that you have taken Buddha's Philosophy on 'No Attachments' to heart. Since yours truly has not yet attained Nirvana, kindly resend the attachments '. Paraphrased from a distant yet unforgiving memory.

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