I just returned to work from an unplanned 3 month medical leave. Had I known that I was going to be away from work for 3 months before my medical mishap occurred I may have done some additional things on that last Friday that I had worked. Of course you never know when the unexpected is going to happen but it would sure make life easier. Here are the things that I would have done on that Friday:
Check in the code and database changes that I had worked on that day.
I am usually good about checking my code back in but I had just started working on an item that required some database changes before I had completed the all the required code changes. So I made the needed changes in the database and was ready to start the coding changes but the weekend had arrived and I would be able to wrap up the changes the following Monday morning which by then I was starting on my medical leave.
About three weeks after I was discharged from my 1 month hospital stay I received a phone call from someone at work. This was someone that I had not known and did not recognize the number on caller ID so I let the call go the answering machine. As I was listening to the message being left the phrase that jumped out at me was “ I need to stop by your home to pick up your laptop”. What? That’s one thing you never want to hear from your employer, especially when you are on leave. So I immediately ran to the phone and picked it up to find out what this was all about. As it turned out the architect on the project I was on was getting ready to prepare for the deployment of the next release and noticed that there was still code checked-out by me. Because they didn’t want to bother me while I was on leave, they figured they would just have someone stop by to get my laptop to get the code changes. When I found out that was all they really needed I went back through the VS project and checked in the changes within a couple of hours. I assured the project manager it was OK to bother me. Much better than asking for my laptop.
Documented what was left to complete on the associated work item.
This would have been a great help when I was checking in the code changes since I did not want to check in changes that were only partially completed or would negatively impact the application. I had to review all my code changes and reconstruct in my mind what I was doing on that last day. I was able to determine that the code and database changes could be safely checked-in but had discovered that there were still some important code and database changes that still needed to be done. This exercise was actually quite helpful in my recovery process as it forced me back into using the skills I would need once I returned back to work.
Make a note of the numerous passwords being used on the various systems in the project I was working on.
Sometimes I’m hard pressed to remember some passwords on a long weekend or a week off but after being off for 3 months my mind went blank when attempting to login in to the VPN and SQL Server database. Thankfully one of the project team members was working offsite (from the client) in the office that day and helped where my memory had failed. It’s funny how things you do numerous times everyday becomes so automatic to you. I guess you need to use it or lose it. Once I “relearned” the passwords I needed, it was like I had never forgotten them in the first place. (On a side note I also forgot my password for signing into my blog site. The list goes on.)
Shutdown my laptop rather than putting it into standby
It seems that without power the laptop cannot remain in the standby mode forever so upon first turning on the laptop Outlook had to recover from an improper shutdown. Now this did not cause much of a problem but you never like to see that you potentially have a corrupted Outlook file.
Clearing all the unneeded emails in outlook
The hospital I was at had a wireless internet connection so I was able to use my laptop to check my work and personal emails. One day I started to receive the dreaded “Your Inbox is full” message warning me that I could stop receiving or sending any more emails unless I archived or deleted past emails so as not to exceed the stated storage limit. So for the next few days I tried to delete all the messages I didn’t need and even emptied the deleted folder but I was still getting the “Your Inbox is full” message every day. So I moved all my emails, which I had been placing in several different folders, over to my personal folders. Now because of the total size of the emails I was moving this took a few hours but at least I got the total size of my Outlook storage down.
Things could have been a whole lot worse but thinking of the things I would have done before going on a leave makes me want to think about how I could change me weekly routine to make things easier even If I do am not gone on leave.