
I’m doing my best to play hooky. I watched the Red Sox win the American League pennant Sunday night instead of writing a post for you (and a sweet victory it was.) But hooky is always a hard thing to enjoy. The voice of guilt pops up in the middle of the hooky experience and throws cold water on the whole effort.
Or maybe it doesn’t. Experts at hooky can dodge school, work, or any other obligation with no fear or guilt.
Have you ever played hooky? Have you ever called in sick when you were feeling just fine just because you didn’t want to work on that day? How did you feel?…
Some people never play hooky. I feel as though there lives have been limited…
Hooky is a symbol of breaking the rules. Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer taught Americans about the art of dodging onerous responsibility. And they are two of the most delightful characters in American literature. They also signaled, by contrast, an American disease uncommon in Europe. Americans suffer from workaholism. Tell a prospective employer that your weakness is that you work too hard and you’ll probably be hired.
We don’t understand that overworking is actually a problem. We all need to know that as much as we love our jobs, we need to take the vacation days allotted to us. We need rest. Rest allows us to find balance. Otherwise, we’ll find ourselves dodging what we need to do, and then facing the dragon of guilt.
I know this dragon. He made me write to you when I’m supposed to be playing hooky. But what do you think?
-Erie Chapman
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