The Province

Politics of the office fridge

AT WORK: A battle ground for people with scent sensitivit­ies, diets and other issues

- BRETT BUNDALE

A story about a missing lunch of shrimp fried rice is captivatin­g social media and shedding light on an often overlooked but highly contentiou­s aspect of office politics: fridge etiquette.

Interactio­ns around the office refrigerat­or — replete with passive-aggressive Post-it notes and decomposin­g leftovers — reveal human behaviour in the workplace, experts say.

Eddy Ng, a professor at Dalhousie University’s Rowe School of Business, said the shared fridge is a microcosm of office dynamics, serving to accentuate interperso­nal skills, communicat­ion styles and personalit­y types.

“It may seem pretty trivial but it can manifest into something that is bigger than just stealing lunches,” he said from Halifax. “It accentuate­s peoples’ personalit­ies and attitudes toward their colleagues.”

It’s also the scene for a comical tale about stolen shrimp fried rice that has gripped social media for days and spurred an online exchange of woes from cubicle-land.

Zak Toscani, a writer and standup comedian, took to Twitter last week after his co-worker’s lunch was stolen.

He joked that the missing food was shrimp fried rice, escalating the crime from a misdemeano­ur to a felony, and mused that it was a “profession­al hit no doubt” due to the lack of a shrimp smell in the microwave or kitchen.

Toscani said his hungry co-worker asked to view security footage of the communal fridge, and detailed to his online followers how the investigat­ion unfolded.

“Lunch was in fridge for less than an hour before it vanished,” he tweeted, noting that the “psychopath” didn’t even eat the food but instead “buried it in the trash.”

“Her motives remain completely unknown,” Toscani said of the perpetrato­r.

After seeing the surveillan­ce footage, he said the victim decided not to press the matter.

“I can’t say I blame him,” Toscani said. “We don’t know what this woman is fully capable of.”

His amusing account of the sensationa­l office drama — he quipped that it was the most excited he’d been “at any job ever” — went viral, garnering hundreds of thousands of likes and re-tweets.

The workplace spat appears to have hit a nerve among workers affected by the seemingly unscrupulo­us actions of self-appointed fridge police.

Comments online included whether the shrimp fried rice story has been “optioned by Hollywood” — including suggestion­s for director and actors — as well as theories about the burglar being a scorned lover seeking vengeance.

“It’s wild,” Toscani said about the surprising amount of attention his narration of events has received.

“It’s become a conversati­on piece because so many people have had their lunch stolen or thrown out,” he said. “Office situations like this seem to be really common.”

Andrea Bonior, a licensed clinical psychologi­st and Georgetown University professor, said workplace kitchens are often fraught with problems.

Bonior said the shared office kitchen is prone to passive aggressive­ness in part because food can be a loaded issue for people due to scent sensitivit­ies, diets and other issues.

“You might need to interact with people to resolve an issue, but rather than deal with it face-to-face, people will often leave notes,” she said, calling it a “stealth attack” against someone without taking the responsibi­lity for being direct.

Bonior recommende­d personal, direct and respectful communicat­ion in any workplace conflict.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? In the realm of office politics, nothing stirs up conflict quite like the office fridge, a cold war waged with passive aggressive Post-it notes and decomposin­g leftovers.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES In the realm of office politics, nothing stirs up conflict quite like the office fridge, a cold war waged with passive aggressive Post-it notes and decomposin­g leftovers.

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