5 Ways Your 15-Minute Meeting Is Actually a Cognitive White Flag
“Did you get the actual specs for the Busan shipment, or did we just agree that ‘soon’ is a real date?”
“We got what we needed. The call was only fifteen minutes. Total efficiency.”
“David, you didn’t get the specs. I can see the vein in your forehead pulsing from here. You ended the call because you stopped understanding what Mr. Park was saying after the nine-minute mark, didn’t you?”
Efficiency is the most socially acceptable form of cowardice. We have elevated the short meeting to a status of moral purity-an altar where we sacrifice nuance for the sake of the schedule-while conveniently forgetting that brevity is often just a symptom of exhaustion. In the hierarchy of corporate virtues, “keeping it tight” sits right at the top, yet it frequently serves as a polite shroud for the fact that our brains have simply reached their processing limit.
The Triage of the Prefrontal Cortex
David sat in his office, the silence of the room feeling heavy after the digital cacophony of the Zoom call. He is a man who trains therapy animals for a living, a job that requires a preternatural level of patience and an ability to read non-verbal cues from a creature that will never speak his language. He
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