Keep Turning the Griddle
The Chicago L train screeched overhead, a sound Nathan still felt in his teeth six months later. It was the sound of urgency, of a city that had no time to wait. Back home in Trinidad, the loudest morning sound was the keskidee, and time was something you had, not something that had you. Here, time was a currency Nathan was quickly running out of. He worked in the claims department of a vast insurance company, in a cubicle that smelled of recycled air and ambition. His job was to process forms, verify details, and close files. In Trinidad, he’d worked at a community health clinic. The pace was slower, woven with long conversations and the understanding that a person was more than a piece of paper. The work got done, but it breathed. Here, the work didn't breathe. It just beeped, demanding attention. His manager, a brisk woman named Carol, pulled him aside on a drizzly Thursday. "Nathan," she said, her voice kind but firm, "your output is below the team average. You...