The Earnest Committee Chair __full__ File

So the next time you sit in a committee meeting, look at the chair. They are probably tired. They are probably underappreciated. And if they are truly earnest—not controlling, not naive, but sincerely devoted to the slow, hard work of us —thank them. Then pass a motion to adjourn early. They’ve earned it.

The ECC learns quickly that earnestness is not rewarded; it is exploited. Other members will weaponize their sincerity, using the chair’s commitment to protocol as a tool for their own passive resistance. “But the chair said we must follow the timeline…” becomes a cudgel. The ECC’s own virtue is turned against them. At a deeper level, the Earnest Committee Chair embodies a distinctly modern ethical dilemma: Can proceduralism ever be heroic? the earnest committee chair

Conversely, their failures are spectacularly visible. If the Zoom link breaks, it is their fault. If the vote is tied, they are accused of poor facilitation. If they try to move a stalled initiative forward, they are labeled “overbearing.” They exist in a perpetual double-bind: do too little, and the committee drifts; do too much, and they are a martinet. So the next time you sit in a