Recently I received a mild reprimanding from my boss about my gratuitious internet usage and was told to limit it to my 15 minute and lunch breaks. Since that conversation I have tried to monitor my usage; and by monitor I mean master the art of switching browser windows when I sense her coming, and then feign productivity.
Today, however, my co-worker said to be careful with the internet because she just heard the boss talking about it. Now, I don't know exactally what that means; weather the boss was talking about the office internet usage or my internet usage specifically. Either way I immediately closed my browser windows and began clicking furiously through Purchase Orders to "check for accuracy in our online database"; which, I might add, I had already done yesterday.
Then it dawned on me:
I was now being bullied in to PRETENDING to work. Ok, I am going to preface the follwing with: I know I'm not the greatest out of my office peers. Most everyone else has been there much longer than I, has more experience and get's very frustrated when I ask them questions about procedures. I don't necessarily understand all the jargon, and am not given the most important tasks, but I'm learning. However, when I do have work to do, I DO IT. I don't neglect my tasks for surfing and browsing the web. If I'm on CNN or Google, it is because I have exhausted all of my current tasks.
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| If only I had solitaire ... |
I feel that as a supervisor, my associates time would be better used doing something productive. Pressuring them in to acting as though they are hard at work only weakens the group and promotes a lack of true ambition and hard work. Case in point: all I want to do any more is work through my assignments as SLOW as possible to avoid idle time, and so that I always appear busy.
Am I totally off base here? Thoughts would be appreciated.

Dude, pretending to work is WAY harder then actually working. I feel you.
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