The Incomplete Script

Reflections on burnout, disillusionment, and questioning the stories we were told

A publication of first-person essays naming what work feels like — without hero framing. These are lived reflections, not advice.

Empty office conference table with notebook, papers, and laptop in a subdued modern workplace

When Your Name Exists but Your Presence Doesn’t

You’re acknowledged in systems and documents, but not quite felt in the room.

This is what it feels like when your name is used fluently, but your presence carries no weight.

You’re looped in, copied, scheduled, and accounted for—yet something essential never arrives with you.

How inclusion becomes abstract

At some point, you notice that being included no longer feels the same as being involved.

Your name travels where you no longer do.

The system knows how to reference you without knowing you.

When recognition becomes symbolic

You’re acknowledged in passing, often indirectly, usually without eye contact or curiosity.

This flattening mirrors what surfaced in what it feels like to be known only by your output, where contribution is visible but personhood is not.

Why this is rarely named

What no one explains is that presence is harder to track than participation.

Systems reward what can be referenced, not what can be felt.

So the absence goes unnoticed, even by those causing it.

The quiet disorientation it creates

Over time, this kind of invisibility blurs the edges of identity.

It connects closely to the realization in when you realize the company wouldn’t notice if you quietly disappeared, where existence becomes optional in practice, not in theory.

This is the quiet difference between being referenced and being present.

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