There was once a man condemned to push a stone up a mountain.
The gods were precise in their cruelty. The stone would roll back down each time. The effort would never conclude. The meaning would never arrive.
Today the mountain has been replaced by an office.
The stone has become a document.
It returns in the form of revisions.
We were told that machines would free us.
In 1930, John Maynard Keynes predicted that technical progress would soon grant humanity a fifteen-hour workweek. He believed that once material needs were satisfied, we would confront the deeper question: what shall we do with our freedom?
The machines came.
The freedom did not.
Agricultural labor collapsed. Industrial labor shrank. Output multiplied. Yet the hours persisted. The factory gave way to the office; the tool to the interface. The stone changed its texture but not its demand.
It would be naïve to claim that all modern labor is useless. The world is intricate. Hospitals require coordination. Bridges require engineering. Goods require logistics. Complex societies produce complex roles.
And yet, beneath the coordination, something unsettles.
There are entire days composed of motion without encounter. Emails answered to maintain flow. Meetings convened to schedule other meetings. Documents prepared for internal circulation, read briefly, then archived. Nothing collapses. Nothing transforms. The system sustains itself.
The absurd does not shout in such places.
It hums.
Albert Camus wrote that the absurd is born of the confrontation between the human need for meaning and the unreasonable silence of the world. In the modern office, the silence is procedural. The longing is quiet. We wish to see the mark of our effort in the world — a repaired engine, a healed body, a shaped piece of wood. Instead we see metrics.
The stone rolls, but invisibly.
We have no tyrannical gods. There is no decree from Olympus. The structure persists without conspiracy. Bureaucracy grows because complexity grows. Risk demands documentation. Regulation demands proof. Institutions demand internal reassurance. No villain is required. Only incentives.
And now a new promise arrives.
Artificial intelligence drafts the memo. It summarizes the report. It answers the inquiry. Once again we are told that liberation approaches.
The stone becomes lighter in one dimension. Heavier in another.
For each task automated, another appears: oversight, compliance, audit, supervision of the machine. We no longer push the stone alone; we monitor its trajectory. The mountain is now algorithmic.
The absurd sharpens not because we work, but because we work without clarity. We are told our labor is necessary. Perhaps it is. Yet necessity becomes abstract. The consequences are statistical, diffused across systems too large to grasp.
If a nurse vanished, suffering would announce itself.
If a mechanic vanished, engines would stall.
If entire departments vanished, the effect might take time to detect.
This is not proof of futility. It is proof of distance.
Work has become moralized. To be busy is to be good. To be idle is to be suspect. Even in abundance, we hesitate before leisure. We fear the silence that would follow.
So we continue.
Sisyphus, in Camus’ telling, is not tragic because he pushes the stone. He is tragic only if he believes in its promised conclusion. The revolt begins in lucidity. He sees the condition clearly and does not appeal to false hope.
What would lucidity look like at the desk?
It would not require the destruction of work. It would require the refusal to sanctify it. It would mean admitting that productivity and purpose are not identical. It would mean asking whether the stone must always be lifted, or whether we have mistaken habit for necessity.
The machines have fulfilled their promise. They have increased our capacity. They have multiplied our output.
They have not answered the question.
If the workweek remains long, it is not because the stone is heavy. It is because we continue to organize our dignity around pushing it.
The absurd remains.
Not in catastrophe.
Not in oppression.
But in fluorescent light, in climate-controlled rooms, in the steady rhythm of revision.
The mountain is now horizontal.
And still, we push.
Yet there is a moment — quiet, almost imperceptible — when the stone rolls back and we descend the slope to retrieve it. In that pause, the task loosens its hold. The structure does not vanish, but its authority weakens. We see the repetition without pretending it is destiny.
That moment is small. It changes nothing outwardly. The email will still be answered. The document will still be revised.
But in that lucidity, something shifts.
The freedom is not in abandoning the stone.
It is in knowing we are the ones who lift it.
And in that knowledge, however modest, the revolt begins.

