Work Table

  • Being interrupted while thinking

    Being interrupted while thinking

    55,00 

    Many people need time to think.
    In reality, this time is often interrupted.
    This table starts from that simple situation No comment being interrupted while trying to concentrate, decide, or understand something. People talk about how this happens in their work and what it changes for them.
    The conversation stays practical and grounded.

  • Being interrupted while thinking

    Being interrupted while thinking

    55,00 
  • Being interrupted while thinking

    Being interrupted while thinking

    55,00 

    Being interrupted while thinking

    In many work situations, taking time to think is necessary.
    It is part of doing things properly: understanding the situation, weighing constraints, choosing words.

    In reality, this time is often interrupted.

    This table starts from that ordinary situation:
    being interrupted while trying to concentrate, decide, or make sense of something at work.

    You describe how interruptions happen in their daily professional life:
    during meetings, in open offices, through urgency, expectations, or habits of speaking quickly.

    You talk about what changes when thinking time is cut short:
    decisions made too fast, ideas left unfinished, fatigue, irritation, or withdrawal.

  • Eating alone, eating together

    Eating alone, eating together

    30,00 

    Eating alone / eating together

    Sometimes we eat alone.
    Not out of sadness — out of habit, timing, or the simple need for quiet.

    Sometimes we eat with others.
    Not to make a moment special, but because it happens naturally, when the day loosens its grip.

    This table is a conversation about those meals.
    About what changes when another plate appears.
    About what remains untouched — appetite, silence, pleasure.

  • Explaining something that seems obvious

    Explaining something that seems obvious

    55,00 

    Explaining something that seems obvious to you

    There are moments when you speak about something that feels simple, almost normal to you.
    You choose your words carefully, you think you are being precise — and yet you notice, little by little, that it does not land.

    Not because the others are inattentive.
    Not because they are incapable.
    But because what feels obvious to you was built slowly, over time, through experience, habit, context — things that were never said aloud.

    Often, you realise this too late.
    In the middle of a sentence.
    In the silence that follows.
    In the polite nod that does not mean understanding.

    This table is about those moments.

  • Explaining something that seems obvious to you

    Explaining something that seems obvious to you

    55,00 

    Explaining something that seems obvious to you

    There are moments when you speak about something that feels simple, almost normal to you.
    You choose your words carefully, you think you are being precise — and yet you notice, little by little, that it does not land.

    Not because the others are inattentive.
    Not because they are incapable.
    But because what feels obvious to you was built slowly, over time, through experience, habit, context — things that were never said aloud.

    Often, you realise this too late.
    In the middle of a sentence.
    In the silence that follows.
    In the polite nod that does not mean understanding.

    This table is about those moments.

    Not to practise explaining better.
    Not to correct language, logic, or structure.
    But to notice what actually happens when clarity exists for one person and not yet for another.

    You bring situations you remember:
    a meeting, a conversation, a task, a decision —
    a moment where they suddenly felt out of sync.

    Others listen.
    They recognise the pause, the slight tension, the feeling of having gone too fast or assumed too much.

    There is no pressure to explain well here.
    No need to finish the thought.
    Sometimes stopping is enough.

  • Having to decide without enough information

    Having to decide without enough information

    55,00 

    Often at work, decisions are taken before everything is known.
    Not because people are careless, but because waiting is sometimes impossible.

    Information is incomplete.
    The situation is moving.
    Others are expecting an answer.

    This table is a conversation about those moments.

    Not to improve decision-making techniques.
    Not to evaluate competence.
    But to speak about what it feels like to decide anyway—and to live with that decision afterward.

    People speak only from situations they recognise.
    There is no advice, no judgement, and no expectation to conclude.

  • Having to decide without enough information

    Having to decide without enough information

    55,00 

    Having to decide without enough information.

    Often at work, decisions are taken before everything is known.
    Not because people are careless, but because waiting is sometimes impossible.

    Information is incomplete.
    The situation is moving.
    Others are expecting an answer.

    This table is a conversation about those moments.

    Not to improve decision-making techniques.
    Not to evaluate competence.
    But to speak about what it feels like to decide anyway—and to live with that decision afterward.

    People speak only from situations they recognise.
    There is no advice, no judgement, and no expectation to conclude.

  • Having to decide without enough information

    Having to decide without enough information

    55,00 

    Having to decide without enough information.

    Often at work, decisions are taken before everything is known.
    Not because people are careless, but because waiting is sometimes impossible.

    Information is incomplete.
    The situation is moving.
    Others are expecting an answer.

    This table is a conversation about those moments.

    Not to improve decision-making techniques.
    Not to evaluate competence.
    But to speak about what it feels like to decide anyway—and to live with that decision afterward.

    People speak only from situations they recognise.
    There is no advice, no judgement, and no expectation to conclude.

  • Saying yes when you are unsure

    Saying yes when you are unsure

    55,00 

    Saying yes when you’re not entirely convinced

    There are moments when we say yes without really knowing.
    Not because we agree, but because the situation moves faster than our certainty.

    It can come from urgency.
    From hierarchy.
    From the feeling that refusing would create more trouble than accepting.

    Often, nothing dramatic happens.
    But something small is put aside: a doubt, a hesitation, a quiet reservation.

    This table looks at those moments.
    Without reproach.
    Without advice.

    People do not explain themselves.
    They recognise situations they have already lived.

  • When expectations are not said clearly

    When expectations are not said clearly

    55,00 

    When expectations are not said clearly

    In many workplaces, expectations remain half-spoken.
    Not hidden on purpose—just assumed, implied, or postponed.

    This often creates a particular discomfort.
    People continue working, being careful, trying to read between the lines.
    They don’t want to push.
    They don’t want to make a scene.
    So they adapt quietly.

    Over time, this produces tension that is hard to name:
    the feeling of never quite doing the right thing,
    of discovering too late that something else was expected,
    of being judged on rules that were never clearly laid out.

    This conversation starts from those moments.
    Not from conflict, but from unease.
    From situations where everyone is serious, competent, and well-intentioned—
    yet slightly out of step.

    We talk about how this unfolds in everyday work:
    the silences,
    the restrained comments,
    the small adjustments people make to protect themselves or others.

     

     

  • When expectations are not set clearly

    When expectations are not set clearly

    55,00 

    When expectations are not said clearly

    In many workplaces, expectations remain half-spoken.
    Not hidden on purpose—just assumed, implied, or postponed.

    This often creates a particular discomfort.
    People continue working, being careful, trying to read between the lines.
    They don’t want to push.
    They don’t want to make a scene.
    So they adapt quietly.

    Over time, this produces tension that is hard to name:
    the feeling of never quite doing the right thing,
    of discovering too late that something else was expected,
    of being judged on rules that were never clearly laid out.

    This conversation starts from those moments.
    Not from conflict, but from unease.
    From situations where everyone is serious, competent, and well-intentioned—
    yet slightly out of step.

    We talk about how this unfolds in everyday work:
    the silences,
    the restrained comments,
    the small adjustments people make to protect themselves or others.

  • When meetings go in circles

    When meetings go in circles

    55,00 

    Many meetings are necessary.
    Everyone knows it.
    Everyone accepts it.

    And then there are those where people speak, again and again,
    without anything really shifting.

    The same words come back.
    The same careful phrasing.
    The same silences too.

    You can feel that something is stuck,
    but no one wants to push.

    This table is a conversation about those moments.
    Not to propose solutions.
    Not to improve anything.

    Just to say what people notice when a discussion stalls.
    What it does to those in the room.
    What they keep to themselves.

  • When meetings go in circles

    When meetings go in circles

    55,00 

    When meetings go in circles 

    Many meetings are necessary.
    Everyone knows it.
    Everyone accepts it.

    And then there are those where people speak, again and again,
    without anything really shifting.

    The same words come back.
    The same careful phrasing.
    The same silences too.

    You can feel that something is stuck,
    but no one wants to push.

    This table is a conversation about those moments.
    Not to propose solutions.
    Not to improve anything.

    Just to say what people notice when a discussion stalls.
    What it does to those in the room.
    What they keep to themselves.

     

  • When meetings go in circles

    When meetings go in circles

    55,00 

    When meetings go in circles

    Many meetings are necessary.
    Everyone knows it.
    Everyone accepts it.

    And then there are those where people speak, again and again,
    without anything really shifting.

    The same words come back.
    The same careful phrasing.
    The same silences too.

    You can feel that something is stuck,
    but no one wants to push.

    This table is a conversation about those moments.
    Not to propose solutions.
    Not to improve anything.

    Just to say what people notice when a discussion stalls.
    What it does to those in the room.
    What they keep to themselves.

  • When responsibility is shared - or unclear

    When responsibility is shared – or unclear

    55,00 

    When responsibility is shared – or unclear

    Sometimes, responsibility is clear.
    Often, it is shared, unclear, or passed from one person to another.

    In this conversation, we talk about moments where no one clearly feels responsible.
    Decisions are not clearly owned.
    People wait, hesitate, or feel unsure about what they should do.

    We listen to how this is experienced in daily work:
    the pause before taking action,
    the tiredness of waiting,
    the unease of stepping in — or choosing not to.

    This is not a space to define roles or improve systems.
    It is a space to notice what happens when responsibility sits between people, not on a document.

    We focus on real situations and everyday moments,
    not on job titles, hierarchy, or authority.