In Mike Birbiglia’s most recent comedy special “Thank God for Jokes,” he perfectly articulates what on-time people honestly think about late people:
What late people don’t understand about us on-time people is that… we hate you. And the reason why we hate you is that it’s so easy to be on time — you just have to be early. And early lasts for hours. And on time lasts a second. And then you’re late forever.
But what Birbiglia doesn’t realise, as a chronically on-timer, is this:
Some of us completely do know how much you hate us. And we’re really f*cking sorry about it.
“It’s selfish,” one of my colleagues says. “Because it says you care more about yourself than the person affected by your lateness.”
“You’re a time thief,” another remarks. “You can never pay anyone back with time.”
“A one-off I can understand, but if it’s every time… I need you to get out of my life,” a third person concludes.
Holly Wainwright, Jacqueline Lunn and I fiercely argue about the politics of lateness on this week’s episode of Mamamia Out Loud. Post continues below.
The thing is, I completely agree with them.
It’s rude. It’s inconsiderate. It’s unacceptable. Yet I am precisely who they are talking about.
Being late is the quality I hate most about myself.
In Tim Urban’s viral article “Why I’m Always Late,” he writes, “I’m not late because I like to smell the roses, or because I can see the big picture, or because the future is full of infinite possibilities…