MAN'S WORLD

Tim Dowling
Sunday 04 April 1999 00:02 BST
Comments

ONE OF the pleasures of working from home is that whenever the little triumphs and tragedies of ordinary family life occur, I can just go upstairs and shut the door. Men who toil in offices must sometimes wonder what they're missing. I know exactly what I'm missing. I can hear the thuds, the screams, the screech of chalk against wall. Some days I can feel it right through my shoes.

Occasionally my curiosity gets the better of me, and I leave my computer for an exploratory trip downstairs. While I'm down there I try to maintain a fog of false concentration about my person, one that says "I'm still working". I notice that Barnaby's Gang Of Four-Year-Olds is meeting at ours this afternoon. There is paint on the carpet, and everyone is naked. I may issue a few peremptory orders, like "Don't stand on the tortoise", but mostly I try not to get involved in their business.

My wife doesn't like it when I come down. She often has friends over, and she doesn't want them to see me. I think she sometimes tries to pretend that I work in the City. It's bad enough that they can hear me playing the guitar, without me coming right into the kitchen to search for more custard creams, wearing a T-shirt I got free with a four-pack of Rolling Rock. She swears at me until I go back upstairs.

Recently circumstances forced me to leave the house for the first time in three years, to go and work in a real office. It was no big deal: a few days a week for a few weeks, just enough time for the novelty of the Northern Line to wear off. My wife seemed to think the experience would do me good, and that I would gain some much needed self-respect by joining, albeit briefly, the world of work. Blinking in the oily sunshine on the platform at Latimer Road, I began to wonder.

On day one of Boo Radley Gets A Job, I learned two things: (1) showing up at 11am with wet hair is not the best way to create an impression, and (2) the modern workplace is a completely doughnut-free environment. I don't know where I got the impression that there would be doughnuts, maybe from television, but I could not hide my disappointment when I saw people eating wholewheat toast. On the second day I brought some doughnuts, and as I ate them co-workers stared at me as if I were smoking crack. I spent all day typing at a computer. I kept thinking, I could be doing this at home, where there's bacon.

When I finished my first three-day week, my son tearfully said he never wanted me to go to work again. At last, I felt like a real commuter. But I began to realise his complaint wasn't really because he missed me. It was just that he disapproved. He likes to know where I am while he's busy at school all day. No father of his was going out to work, not if he could help it.

So I promised. Never again.

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in