Not the usual hum of the fryers, the beep of the register, or the chatter of coworkers you’ve spent more waking hours with than your own family. This time, the noise feels different. Muffled. Like you’re already half-gone.
— To everyone who has ever closed down a restaurant, a retail store, a warehouse, or an office for the final time: You did the work. Now go do the next thing. last shift
The Last Shift: When You Clock Out for the Final Time Not the usual hum of the fryers, the
But the clock doesn’t care about nostalgia. It ticks to the hour. You punch out. The machine beeps—the same beep as always, but this one is a period at the end of a long, messy, beautiful sentence. Like you’re already half-gone
You look around and realize: I’ll never stand here again.
That was your last shift. Tomorrow, a new one begins.
You find yourself doing the motions you’ve done a thousand times—restocking napkins, wiping down the counter, checking the back door is locked—but your hands are on autopilot. Your mind is elsewhere. Replaying the inside jokes, the meltdowns in the walk-in cooler, the regular who always ordered the same thing and asked how your day was.