• iconNews
  • videos
  • entertainment
  • Home
  • News
    • UK News
    • US News
    • Australia
    • Ireland
    • World News
    • Weird News
    • Viral News
    • Sport
    • Technology
    • Science
    • True Crime
    • Travel
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrity
    • TV & Film
    • Netflix
    • Music
    • Gaming
    • TikTok
  • LAD Originals
    • Say Maaate to a Mate
    • Daily Ladness
    • Lad Files
    • UOKM8?
    • FreeToBe
    • Extinct
    • Citizen Reef
  • Advertise
  • Terms
  • Privacy & Cookies
  • LADbible Group
  • UNILAD
  • SPORTbible
  • GAMINGbible
  • Tyla
  • UNILAD Tech
  • FOODbible
  • License Our Content
  • About Us & Contact
  • Jobs
  • Latest
  • Topics A-Z
  • Authors
Facebook
Instagram
X
Threads
Snapchat
TikTok
YouTube

LAD Entertainment

YouTube

LAD Stories

Submit Your Content
Boss introduces ‘Bare Minimum Mondays’ to give her staff a ‘gentle’ start to the week

Home> News

Published 02:11 29 May 2023 GMT+1

Boss introduces ‘Bare Minimum Mondays’ to give her staff a ‘gentle’ start to the week

Are you a lazy sloth? Well, this might appeal to you, then.

Rachel Lang

Rachel Lang

You've heard of quiet quitting. Now let us introduce you to the next big thing in workplace trends that's being dubbed as 'lazy' by - you guessed it - the Baby Boomer generation.

The new trend is called 'Bare Minimum Mondays' and Australian marketing boss Caitlin Winter has decided to lean into it.

If you're a bit unfamiliar with the concept of doing the bare minimum, let me, an expert lazy person and professional taker of 'the easy way out', explain it to you.

Advert

The movement basically promotes a 'gentle start' to the working week.

This could be by working from home on Mondays, or a half day, or whatever. It is just designed to be less stress.

Loads of people have the Sunday Scaries where they are terrified of the week ahead and don't get to enjoy the final day of their weekend.

This new way of working is meant to avoid this exact feeling.

Advert

And let's face it: We could all use some time to be a little kinder to ourselves, anyway.

Winter, the Adelaide based marketing manager, told news.com.au that for her, it was a way for staff to take their day at their own pace and to treat themselves with 'space and kindness'.

"A lot of people think it means I sit in my PJs all day in front of the TV and do no work," she said.

"But in reality, it is simply a day where we work from home, don’t schedule in any meetings and generally just treat ourselves with a little more space and kindness to set up for a productive week ahead.

Advert

"For us, it means not putting pressure on ourselves to get those big projects done."

She added: "Other things that we might get to do on these days are loads of washing we didn’t get to on the weekend, grocery shopping, planning dinners for the week or walking your dog.

"For one member of my team, it means being able to drop off and pick up her kids from school which she is unable to do during the week."

Imagine if your employer did Bare Minimum Mondays AND kicked off a four-day week at your job.

Golly, we sure as hell wouldn't be Quiet Quitting anytime soon.

Advert

Winter says she was inspired to introduce the concept to her office after reading up about its creator.

Marisa Jo Mayes went viral for coining the term 'Bare Minimum Mondays'.

She wrote an essay for Insider where she said: "Every week, the 'Sunday scaries' would hit, and every Monday, I'd sleep in until the absolute last second because I knew that list was waiting for me.

"The pressure I was putting on myself was paralyzing, and I realized something had to change."

Featured Image Credit: LinkedIn/Caitlin Winter. Panther Media GmbH / Alamy Stock Photo

Topics: Mental Health, Health, News, Good News, Weird

Rachel Lang
Rachel Lang

Rachel Lang is a Digital Journalist at LADbible. During her career, she has interviewed Aussie PM Malcolm Turnbull in the lead up to the 2016 federal election, ran an editorial campaign on the war in Yemen, and reported on homelessness in the lead-up to Harry and Meghan’s wedding in Windsor. She also once wrote a yarn on the cheese and wine version of Fyre Festival.

X

@rlangjournalist

Advert

Advert

Advert

Choose your content:

an hour ago
2 hours ago
14 hours ago
  • an hour ago

    The weight you need to be to get Mounjaro from your GP revealed

    It's being reserved for those with the 'greatest need'

    News
  • 2 hours ago

    Brit who 'married 9-year-old girl' in Disneyland stunt revealed as convicted pedophile

    The British paedophile reportedly staged a mock wedding with a nine-year-old girl at Disneyland Paris

    News
  • 2 hours ago

    Fury in White House after leaked docs reveal truth about Trump's 'obliteration' claims

    Intelligence suggests the targets in Iran weren't quite as 'obliterated' as Trump initially claimed

    News
  • 14 hours ago

    Worrying simulation shows how nuclear bomb really works as global tensions continue to rise

    A simulation of an atomic bomb has highlighted the alarming effects it can cause

    News
  • Boss responds to Gen Z employee's request to leave work early after finishing all of her work for the day
  • Psychiatrist reveals the eight words people should say every morning to start their days right
  • Diagnosed psychopath who admits she ‘doesn’t feel love’ reveals what actually matters to her in life
  • What happened to man who survived three hours in a sensory deprivation room