CONCEPT
Presence Bleed
Melissa Gregg's term for the <em>seepage of work consciousness</em> into domestic life through digital connectivity — the contamination of one register by another until the original is unrecoverable.
Presence bleed names the condition in which the worker's body occupies one register (the dinner table, the child's bedroom) while her mind occupies another (the inbox, the deadline). Gregg coined the term in Work's Intimacy (2011) after ethnographic fieldwork with Australian knowledge workers who experienced the contamination not as dramatic intrusion but as the unremarkable texture of contemporary professional life. The term's analytical precision exceeds the existing vocabulary of work-life balance: balance implies two discrete quantities on a scale, but presence bleed describes a stain that spreads through fabric until the original color is no longer visible. The AI moment transforms the phenomenon qualitatively — from communication-driven reactive bleed to production-driven generative bleed.
In The You On AI Field Guide
Gregg's workers did not experience presence bleed as dramatic. They described it in the vocabulary of productivity culture itself — flexibility, adaptability, managing multiple demands. The language available to them had no word for what they were losing. Gregg's contribution was to supply the vocabulary: to identify as dispossession
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