The silence on the Zoom call stretched past the point of professional patience, landing squarely in the realm of the agonizing. “Sayid, what do you think about the Q3 projections for the Dubai rollout?” Mark asked, his voice carry-on-baggage light, breezy with the unearned confidence of a man who has never had to navigate a syntax he didn’t own from birth.
On the screen, Sayid’s tile was a masterpiece of corporate punctilio: he was centered, his lighting was impeccable, and his gaze was fixed firmly on the lens. But the silence remained, a heavy, unvocalized weight that Mark eventually dismissed as a latency issue, moving on to the next person before Sayid could even find the words to explain he had lost the thread of the conversation twenty minutes prior.
I felt a similar flash of indignant invisibility this morning when a silver sedan whipped into the parking spot I had been signaling for over three minutes. The driver didn’t look at me; he simply existed in a world where my presence was a data point he chose to ignore.
In the modern workspace, we do this to our international colleagues every single day, mistaking their silent presence for active participation, oblivious to