Exciting development on the CheeseGov front: I don’t have to play musical chairs in the office this summer. Oxymorons be damned, I have a new permanent temporary spot on the fourth floor. Feels a bit like slumming after working on the sixth floor – after all, the Jeffersons were movin’ on up, not down – but at least with an assigned desk there’s no stress over finding an empty workspace.

This all came about because we have an intern who started this week. Last year’s intern was stuck in a conference room all summer; not an ideal setup, as she had very little interaction with the rest of the communications team. So, senior leadership decided to find us a spot where we could all sit together to collaborate and shit. The fourth floor, it turns out, is basically a ghost town – a vacant sea of empty desks and cubicles thanks to our space consolidation efforts, so they assigned us a coveted corner section with nary another person around (save for Randy and the intern). It’s so deserted, the motion-activated overhead lights occasionally shut off due to lack of movement.

Cozy little corner? I could get used to this!

I was pretty excited at first. My cubicle is right next to a window that offers a nice view to the west, and it’s so quiet, you can hear a pin drop.*

*Actually, this is not true. I find that phrase problematic. You would need superhuman hearing to detect the faint sound of a pin dropping, especially on a carpeted surface. But I digress.

In any case, I was really digging it. The weather on Tuesday was stormy, so I was enjoying the dramatic skies. I had my headphones on, rocking out to Built To Spill and Led Zeppelin and Pearl Jam, as one does, while toiling away on Official Government Business.

I had a front row seat for Mother Nature’s Tuesday show.

And then the explosions started.

At first I assumed the loud popping noises were thunder, but then the sun came out and they kept happening. I’m no scientist, but apparently, temperature and humidity fluctuations cause large panes of glass – in this case, our windows – to expand and contract, creating pressure. Every few minutes, all day long, it sounded like little explosions were going off right next to me. Now I know what it’s like to be a war correspondent.

Fun. And not the least bit distracting.

I don’t know why this happens on the fourth floor and not the sixth, but maybe it’s the real reason everyone deserted this part of the building. God forbid, if some deranged cheese-hating lunatic with a semi-automatic assault rifle ever breaches security, I am liable to die in my cubicle because I’ll assume the rattle of gunfire is just the windows doing their science-y thing.

Suddenly, the stress of finding an open flex spot doesn’t sound so bad. I just have to survive through August, when the intern leaves.

Speaking of interns, I’ve worked with quite a few of them over the years. Those experiences have mostly been positive (especially when I got paid to go hiking in the Black Hills with a college senior named Sarah who was an aspiring writer/photographer). I enjoy corrupting young minds being a mentor and sharing my wisdom and knowledge with the leaders of tomorrow. After all, I was an intern once, so I know how valuable hands-on experience can be.

Internships sure have changed a lot since the early ’90s, when I worked for a direct mail agency the summer before graduation. For instance: I was surprised to learn that most interns today get paid. Plus, the programs offer a lot more structure, allowing college students to perform work that’s actually relevant to their future career interests. What a concept. I was a glorified gofer who stuffed a lot of envelopes and accompanied reps on sales calls – and I did it for free. Since I had no aspirations to become either a professional envelope stuffer or a salesperson, this was mostly a waste of time.

I got a little bit of experience designing ads, at least. This involved a lot of cutting and pasting. Literally, we’re talking scissors and glue, since computers were still in their infancy (god, I’m old). The best thing about my internship? They gave me a cool nickname, The Hawk, because I had a knack for catching errors.

Make it Poutine

I got a text from a family friend in Hawaii this morning. He’s been watching the news about the Canadian wildfire smoke that’s blanketing the Midwest and was wondering whether it was affecting us.

First of all, what a nice gesture! Thanks, Dave. I appreciate your concern.

Secondly: yes. The smoke has been a steady presence for almost a week now, boosting our AQI to unhealthy levels. I thought the 2.5″ of rain we got Tuesday/Wednesday would disperse it, but it was actually worse after the storms blew through. Walking around Madison yesterday, it smelled like I was in a campground. Until the wind shifts direction, the smoke is going to be lingering, like a houseguest on their fifth night. Go away already!

Look, I like Canada as much as the next guy (though maybe not as much as the dumbass who wants to annex them). But they can stop sending us their wildfire smoke any time! These fires have been burning since March, 2023, which begs the question: How is there even anything left to burn by now?

Hey Canada, if you insist on sharing, send us something good, like poutine or the Northern Lights.  

In the meantime, I’ll do a rain dance for y’all.

Have you worked with college interns? Were you an intern yourself? How’s your air quality lately?


67 responses to “Distracting little explosions.”

    1. NOW you nailed the second-shortest comment!

      Liked by 1 person

      1. There we go! Thanks for picking up what I was putting down.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Just maybe be careful where you put it next time. I almost tripped over the dang thing. I don’t want to end up in a foot brace like you, no offense!

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Heh heh. Understood. I’ll be more careful. 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  1. The window popping noises would make me jump every time! I must have a high startle reflex. I had several student teachers and they were mostly fine although I started refusing because it was a lot of extra work and stress. And my students hated it.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I always feel like the age difference might make things awkward, but so far, it never has. I’m still friends with the Sarah mentioned here to this day.

      Like

  2. I can’t imagine the window popping! Sounds nerve wracking. Yes, it’s hazy today. Come on Canada, you’re better than that!

    Funny you should mention interns. My husband sat on a panel this week to answer intern questions at a downtown law firm. I told him it was going to be fun and I was right!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I got to take participate in the two-part interview process, which in this case meant evaluating anonymous candidates based on their responses to various questions, and then grading them on a 9-point scale. It was an interesting experience. Presumably, our guy passed muster with me, since he’s sitting right next to the exploding windows.

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  3. I think exploding windows is a perfectly reasonable explanation why the fourth floor was vacated. But hey, maybe the noise will bring you inspiration.
    Sorry about the wildfire smoke. With Maine being so close to Canada you’d think we would feel the effects, but other than a little haze, we’re fine.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I assume that’s because the provinces on fire are immediately north and northwest of us…the same direction as those prevailing winds.

      Music is my inspiration. Explosions just cause stress.

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Sorry from Canada. This is who we are now. Sigh.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. No hard feelings, eh.

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  5. Was never an intern technically but had the opportunity during high school summers to work for the big regional electric company where my dad was employed. Quite fun to dress like a hip 70’s young adult (I had a truly amazing black jumpsuit as an example) and handle lots of money at the drive up payment window, sub in my dad’s local office and believe that I was the best admin he ever had, and also have the “pleasure” of going to the warehouse on various errands to get eyeballed and listen to off color remarks by the lineman on their breaks. As an adult I have mentored many students throughout my careers and as a volunteer and loved it. No AQ issues at this time but I suspect the fires will be blazing in eastern WA soon enough with drifting smoke. By the time I get to CO in August I’m sure I’ll need to pick up a box of masks

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I wish I could have dressed like a hip ’70s young adult, but alas, my mom’s homemade polyester shirts were pretty much the opposite of hip.

      (No offense if you’re reading this, mom!)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Stretch and Sew was all the rage in the 70’s,not that I would know since I was too young then.😂

        Liked by 2 people

      2. see my response to Mark, mom. I bet you rocked that polyester 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

      3. Polyester has to be one of the worst abominations ever created, but I can see mom was just following the trends. I think that makes her the hip one 😉

        Liked by 1 person

  6. Popping windows seems… odd. I worked in a nearly desserted bldg toward the end of covid. When the wind blew outside (pretty constant) it roared like a jet inside. Structurally sound but bad design!!

    I was never an intern, but I worked with & supervised a bunch of them – always had a great time cause I rarely gave them rush or difficult tasks, fully explained reasoning when I did, and generally treated them well.

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    1. And great AQ today, thanks to mild temps & ocean breeze. For the first time ever, I’m kinda dreading summer.

      Liked by 1 person

    2. I was hoping my readers would say popping windows were “normal.” Instead, I get “odd.” This is not helping my stress much!

      What exactly are you dreading about summer, just out of curiosity?

      Liked by 1 person

      1. I’m dreading oppressive heat… 100°F and higher, without a/c and recovering from a knee replacement!!

        I used to enjoy the heat, even when extreme, but last year was torture for me and it seems likely to repeat.

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Ugh, okay, yeah…I totally get that! I hate it too. And I have A/C.

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  7. I was never technically an intern, but I worked at a few newspapers where I was making so little that it felt like I was paying them for clips. Ha, ha. Yes, I do believe the job has changed a bit over the years. Thank goodness. And yes, thank goodness for your snazzy new corner office!!!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It didn’t help that I was about to graduate with an Advertising degree but had zero interest in the field at that point.

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Just read your About page. Watermelon?? You remind me of a long ago friend who called popcorn “stupid food” (cause it never satisfied his hunger).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Yeah, I absolutely despise watermelon. I keep an open mind and try a bite every year, but so far, I’m batting 0.00.

      Weirdly, Tara and I were just talking about how popcorn isn’t satisfying last week.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Fried eggs don’t fill me up… I could eat a dozen without an issue. But scramble them and I get full. Makes no sense!!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. I frequently have a bag of popcorn for lunch. Nothing else. Just popcorn.

        Liked by 1 person

  9. I’d say keep the floor and wear those giant safety goggles and put up a bulletproof shield like they have in some gas stations when the popping sounds start and have the whole floor to your department. we had lots of crazy intern experiences when I was in advertising, a

    in my teaching days, the last one we had was the worst so it was the funniest. he, the intern/student teacher was actually from our high school and they were required to work in the preschool/kindergarten for a month as a sort of community service/learning experience option.. there were a choice of community internships but I think he thought this would be really easy. all of our buildings were on the same campus so he could walk over. he was late every day, super tired, lazy and just watched. he did not want to interact with the kids, had no concept of little kids being nonstop high energy, actually having lessons and learning things, moving from room to room, having specials, needing help with everything, having unregulated emotions, going outside in all weather, crying, laughing, fighting, singing, messy, nonstop talking, questions, etc. he hated every minute of every day. he would fall asleep on the playground and at lunch. the administrators called him out. etc. at the end he wrote sort of a passive aggressive thank you card, saying, ‘ I don’t know how you do your job but you guys are really good at it , but it’s awful and very boring and thanks so much.’

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Geez Louise…why on earth would someone want to be a teacher if they didn’t know the most basic concept about what kids are like?! He sounds like a younger version of George Costanza!

      Like

  10. We have slight haze/very faint smoke smell here in Pa.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. May the winds of fortune continue to blow your way. Or not blow your way, as the case may be…

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Yeah we are planning to hit up the Bronx zoo Sunday kinda hoping NYC doesn’t royally suck

        Liked by 1 person

      2. Hey btw weren’t you once folloing my blog or am I mistaken ?

        Liked by 1 person

      3. I was! But you stopped posting in January, right? I haven’t seen any new updates in months.

        Like

      4. ? Weird. No I’ve been posting the last 6 months

        Like

      5. Must be a fucked up wordpress glitch 😑

        Liked by 1 person

      6. I just clicked on your name and I see that you have been posting all year, and I was no longer subscribed. I have no idea WTF happened…I never unsubscribed! I just assumed you were reading only and not posting. Truly sorry about that, Matt.

        Liked by 1 person

      7. Shitblike this makes me hate WP at times.

        Liked by 1 person

  11. If your fourth floor is anything like the fourth floor in Parks and Rec, you’re in for a very creepy summer, popping windows or no popping windows.
    Our air seems to be better now, but earlier this week it was quite bad. Interestingly, digital freeway signs have been up for a while now that say, “Poor air quality – consider reducing trips.” Meanwhile, the state government just forced its employees to go back to the office, ending the pandemic era work-from-home scheme. How’s that for speaking out of both sides of your mouth?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Ugh. I worry so much about an in-person mandate. Wisconsin Republicans want state workers to return to the office, but thankfully, Gov. Evers is firmly opposed. Still, who knows how it will all shake out in the future? As much as I love my job, I would seriously have to reconsider staying, depending on the requirements. I have no problem with hybrid work, as I do now, but anything more than three days and I’d have to explore other options.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Fingers crossed for you. The impact of large groups of people suddenly getting in their cars more often is felt far and wide.

        Liked by 1 person

  12. I was an intern in college in the 80s. I got paid and did real work. My daughter has interned and also done real work. I think it’s a great opportunity to try on a hat. For example my daughter realized what she didn’t want very clearly

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Man…I’m beginning to think they totally took advantage of me!

      Liked by 1 person

  13. I was a college intern in a marketing/advertising firm. It was boring, but I did get paid a pittance. I also did an unpaid internship at an old-fashioned printing company that was much more interesting.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m beginning to think I’m the only one who didn’t get paid for doing an internship. (Having said that, I’m sure I would find the unpaid printing company gig more appealing, too.)

      Liked by 1 person

  14. I didn’t pursue an internship in college. I probably should have; it might have made getting a job in my chosen field easier. But, it all worked out in the long run.

    I’ve never worked with true interns. I spent my entire career working as a civilian on a military installation. We got a *lot* of newbies on their first assignment after tech school. Sort of the military version of interns, LOL. One of my friends said my job title should have been “Base Mom.”

    Liked by 1 person

    1. My internship was a graduation requirement, so I didn’t have much choice in the matter. Other than dropping out of college, of course!

      Liked by 1 person

  15. Glad you have a designated cubicle . . . even if the window is about to implode on you . . . allowing all the wildfire smoke from Canada to infiltrate you breathing space.

    I bet WFH never looked so good, eh?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. You don’t know the half of it. When I got home on Wednesday afternoon, I practically shouted with joy knowing I’d be WFH the next three days!

      Liked by 1 person

  16. The explosions would make me nuts. Unexpected noise that I can’t control (like my partner dropping stuff in the kitchen) makes me feel stabby. Canadian temperate forest are so huge there’s no way to stop those fires–they just protect structures as best they can. Which is why we in SoCal have gotten to borrow the Quebecois water bombers in the past. Not sure we will get them now, though. Another reason Trump needs to shut up.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I have incorrectly assumed for two years now that the fires would die out over the winter, as cold as it gets up there. No such luck! They’ve gotta burn themselves out at some point though!

      LOL @ “stabby.”

      Liked by 1 person

  17. Those windows sound nuts. I think you may have uncovered why a local government would have an entire floor unused…

    The other day at the supermarket, I was driven crazy by a vast array of beeps. I am absolutely certain I’ve never noticed even one of the many varieties of beep I was hearing. But I was also worried that my cortisol levels have gotten so high that I may’ve developed that condition when sounds become unbearable – I forget the name…

    Anyway, enjoy your new designated desk working space where you have to wear earbuds to keep yourself from going crazy. Shame it messes with the team communication thing…

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Misophonia is an aversion to certain noises. (I worked for an audiology/ENT consulting firm for six years and literally wrote hundreds of articles on every ear, nose, and throat condition under the sun. I know more about tinnitus and hyperthyroidism and sinusitis and vertigo and many other diseases than you’d believe.)

      Liked by 1 person

      1. That’s the word! Thank you 🙂

        Good to know you have whole sections of brain dedicated to stuff that’s no longer useful – and that I’m not alone in this!

        Liked by 1 person

  18. Like a houseguest on their fifth night — what a brilliant call back! Sorry about the windows – that’s not distracting at all! 🙂 I hope that you all enjoy the weekend, AQI be damned! I know you will!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. What can I say? I love a good callback! And I am super looking forward to this weekend, smoke or not. Hope you and the kids have a blast too!

      Liked by 1 person

  19. The air quality down here is pretty bad, but I’d imagine it’s even worse up by you.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. It comes and goes. The weekend wasn’t too bad, but the past two days have been super hazy again.

      Liked by 1 person

  20. Weird about the windows popping like that. I wonder if that floor has more or less humidity that could assist with the weirdness? Maybe the windows are older? The temp is different two floors down? I need to know why this is happening!

    I’m glad that you went into writing and not in a career as a professional envelope stuffer, because paper cuts are real.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. This week, they’ve barely made a sound. The weather has also been calmer. There’s got to be a correlation!

      Paper cuts and stepping on LEGOs: two of the worst types of pain imaginable!

      Liked by 1 person

  21. Most internships are still unpaid in 2025. I advise college students and I know this for a fact.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. I don’t know how they manage. It was tough enough for me all those years ago!

      Like

  22. […] (!) one 45 minutes after that. Each time an alert sounded over the intercom, I ducked lower in my corner cubicle on the nearly deserted 4th floor, hoping the “This is not an option!” guy wouldn’t see me. Thankfully, it […]

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  23. […] June, you might recall I moved to the 4th floor of CheeseGov HQ. We had a summer intern starting, and the Powers That Be wanted us to have a […]

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