You are sitting in a grid of twelve faces, and your primary job is to look like you are there. It is in Berlin and in Tokyo, and the air in the digital room is thick with the staccato rhythm of rapid-fire English.
You watch the mouths move. You see the gestures-a hand waved dismissively at a bug report, a leaning-in toward the camera when the quarterly goals are mentioned. You nod when the person next to you on the screen nods. It is a choreographed dance of compliance.
But if someone were to reach through the screen and ask you, in this exact microsecond, what the Lead Architect just said about the database migration, the honest answer would be a blur of vowels and a vague sense of urgency.
The Ritual of the Ghost-Attendee
This is the ritual of the ghost-attendee. You are physically present in the calendar invite, your bandwidth is being consumed, and your avatar is glowing with the green ring of activity, but you are not actually in the meeting.
You are in a waiting room. You are waiting for the meeting to end so that the “real” meeting can begin-the one that happens in a Slack DM or a localized recap later. We call this “global collaboration,” but it looks a lot more like a series of delayed echoes.
