It’s Friday afternoon. The work is technically still happening, but let’s not kid ourselves—by this point, productivity is hanging on by a thread. Spreadsheets are open but unedited. Emails are being read but not processed. The most important thing on anyone’s mind is how soon they can leave without it looking too obvious.
The exit strategy is crucial. Time it wrong, and you could get caught in a last-minute meeting. Show your hand too early, and you risk looking too eager to escape (which, of course, you are, but dignity must be maintained). Some will attempt a graceful exit. Others will sprint for the door like they’re escaping a burning building.
So, which one are you?
The Stealth Exit (a.k.a. The Great Escape)
No goodbyes. No fuss. Just a silent, surgical retreat. One moment, they were there—typing furiously, head down, deep in work mode. The next? Vanished. Like a workplace ninja.
The stealth exit is the elite way to leave work on a Friday. The key is to prepare in advance. Bag packed discreetly. Coat casually draped over the chair, ready to grab in one fluid motion. No unnecessary movements. No hesitation.
The biggest risk? Being seen on the way out. A brief encounter with a boss or a needy colleague could spell disaster. The only way to avoid detection is confidence—walk like you have a meeting elsewhere, not like you’re bolting for freedom.
If done correctly, you will be halfway home before anyone even realises you’ve gone.
The Loud and Proud Exit (a.k.a. The Friday Fanatic)
This person doesn’t just leave. They make it everyone’s problem.
At precisely 4:55 PM, they stretch dramatically, make a loud sighing noise, and announce:
“WELL, THAT’S ME DONE!”
It’s less of a statement and more of a performance. They will clap their laptop shut with an unnecessary level of force. They might swing their coat over their shoulder, like a cowboy leaving a saloon. They will definitely add something like:
“Right, I’m off for a pint.”
“Enjoy your weekends, everyone!”
“Don’t work too hard! Haha!”
They want everyone to know they are leaving. And they want you to resent them for it.
But beware—there is one fatal flaw to this method. If the timing is wrong, this can provoke the boss into remembering something they “just need to check” before you go. And then, my friend, you are trapped.
The ‘Pretend to Look Busy’ Exit
A delicate balancing act. This person knows they could leave, but they don’t want to be seen leaving too early. Instead, they do the classic routine:
- Clicking their mouse a few times on an already open document.
- Staring at the screen with a very serious expression.
- Sighing, rubbing their temples, possibly even writing something down (complete nonsense).
This is all theatre. They are waiting for exactly 5:00 PM, at which point they stand up and leave instantly. No goodbyes, no chit-chat, just a clean exit.
They don’t get caught in any last-minute work. But they also don’t raise suspicion by leaving too early. It’s the perfect crime.
The Fake Last-Minute Work Exit
This person wants to look busy, but they also want to leave.
At precisely 4:59 PM, they send one strategic email. Something vague, like:
“Just circling back on this—let’s discuss Monday.”
This creates the illusion that they are deeply engaged in their work, when in reality, their coat is already on. The moment the email sends, they are gone.
The best part? They look productive while making extra work for someone else. A true masterstroke of Friday office politics.
The “One More Thing” Victim
This poor soul almost makes it to the door but is stopped at the last second by:
“Oh, before you go…”
Trapped. Helpless. Their weekend slipping away before their eyes.
This can come in many forms:
- A manager with “just a quick question” (never quick).
- A colleague who “just needs a hand with something” (definitely not a one-person job).
- An email arriving at the exact moment they stood up, forcing them to sit back down and pretend they care.
They will now leave work 30 minutes late while their colleagues are already in the pub. A true Friday tragedy.
The Eternal Socialiser
This person could have left work ages ago, but they got stuck in a chat at the door.
They have been saying goodbye for 45 minutes. Their coat is on. Their bag is packed. They keep inching towards the exit but somehow never quite make it. Every time they try to leave, someone else says something interesting, and the cycle continues.
At this point, they may as well stay and get paid overtime for talking.
The “I Was Supposed to Leave an Hour Ago”
This is the unfortunate soul who meant to leave at 4, but somehow, they’re still here at 6. They didn’t get caught in a meeting. They didn’t have urgent work.
They simply got distracted, lost track of time, and now feel awkward about suddenly standing up and leaving.
Nobody will thank them for staying. Nobody will even notice. And yet, they will spend the whole weekend complaining about it.
However You Leave, Just Leave
No matter how it happens, one thing is certain—you must leave before something ruins your weekend.
The moment the clock hits 5, everything becomes a Monday problem. There is nothing that cannot wait.
So do not hesitate. Do not get trapped. And whatever you do, never, ever, check your emails on a Friday night.
Dwight Warner is the quintessential oddball Brit, with a weirdly American-sounding name, who has a knack for turning the mundane into the extraordinary. Hailing originally from London, now living in the sleepy depths of Lincolnshire but claiming an allegiance to the absurd, Dwight has perfected the art of finding the surreal in real life. Whether it’s a spirited rant about the philosophical implications of queueing or a deep dive into why tea tastes better in a mug older than you, his blogs blur the line between the abstract and the everyday.
With an irreverent wit and a penchant for tangents that somehow come full circle, Dwight Warner doesn’t just write; he performs on the page. His humour is both sharp and delightfully nonsensical, like Monty Python met your nosiest neighbour and they decided to co-write a diary.
Known for being gregarious, Dwight is the life of any (real or metaphorical) party, whether he’s deconstructing the existential crisis of mismatched socks or sharing his inexplicable theories about why pigeons are secretly running the economy.
A larger-than-life personality with a laugh as loud as his opinions, Dwight Warner invites readers to step into a world where everything’s slightly askew—and that’s exactly how he likes it.
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