As someone who's had to come up with product copy and have had to fix bugs, people trying to interrupt me writing a long e-mail gets me way more than people interrupting me while trying to fix a bug where I already "know" the issue and I'm just doing the cleanup/test writing.
I am being too glib. But the sort of "focus broken, can't move forward" feeling is something I constantly have felt in many non-programming tasks. Granted this blocking is also due to the nebulous nature of those tasks vs, say, fixing a bug. Most bugs (not all!) at least have some sort of definitiveness to them.
The coddling I talk about is stuff like other staff members being told to "not bother the coders", something I've seen first and second hand. That, along with many programmer's (myself included) habit of generating endless excuses for why something is not happening and it being more or less accepted as a given. But as someone who struggles with this stuff, I also know that a large percentage of it is due to my own behavior! And changing that has improved things.
My post is combatative, but mainly because I really want people who read this stuff to introspect on their own behavior, and _improve_, instead of assuming that the task is impossible due to some intrinsicc nature of the work that is overestimated
I am being too glib. But the sort of "focus broken, can't move forward" feeling is something I constantly have felt in many non-programming tasks. Granted this blocking is also due to the nebulous nature of those tasks vs, say, fixing a bug. Most bugs (not all!) at least have some sort of definitiveness to them.
The coddling I talk about is stuff like other staff members being told to "not bother the coders", something I've seen first and second hand. That, along with many programmer's (myself included) habit of generating endless excuses for why something is not happening and it being more or less accepted as a given. But as someone who struggles with this stuff, I also know that a large percentage of it is due to my own behavior! And changing that has improved things.
My post is combatative, but mainly because I really want people who read this stuff to introspect on their own behavior, and _improve_, instead of assuming that the task is impossible due to some intrinsicc nature of the work that is overestimated