From Donna’s Desk

In our department, the sentence “I found this under the conference table” can mean anything from “a missing IT ticket” to “an ancient cursed artifact the company built its first fax machine from,” so I’ve learned to pause before responding.
Managerial instinct is basically just pattern recognition with more paperwork, and every fiber of mine said: Do not unleash these near exit doors.
“Let’s open them here,” I told Milo.
He beamed, because to Milo, “open them here” is raccoon for “congratulations, you are now a junior treasure hunter.”
We lined them up on my desk. Black paper, black ribbon, no tags: the packaging equivalent of a burner phone.
I opened the first one.
Inside was… me.
A small, eerily accurate Donna figurine, complete with purple glasses and sensible blazer, staring up from my palm like I had just been promoted to my own action figure.
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Start from the beginning of the strip.
Milo, meanwhile, had opened another box. “It’s us,” he breathed. “We’re so cute!”
He was right. Mini-Milo. Mini-Dash. Mini-Finley. Mini-Drew. A tiny version of the department, lined up along the edge of my desk like we were about to hold a very small, very concerned staff meeting.
That’s when I noticed the smell.
Not the new-plastic smell you expect from corporate swag.
Not even the faint whiff of warehouse dust.
Catnip. The figurines smelled like catnip.
If you’ve never worked with a mostly-feral black cat, let me translate: in our environment, “smells like catnip” is less “fun bonus” and more “prepare for incoming strategic strike.”
That should have been enough weirdness for one day.
It was not.
Accessorized with each doll was a pin. Not sewing pins. Not safety pins.
Long, sharp, red-topped pins.
I didn’t say anything out loud, because leadership books frown on the phrase, “Are we being hexed?” appearing in performance reviews.
But the thought hovered there along with the faint catnip haze:
Someone, somewhere, ordered voodoo-scented, cat-attracting miniature versions of my staff.
Best-case scenario: this is a deeply misguided attempt at “employee engagement.”
Worst-case scenario: someone in Corporate believes the fastest way to increase productivity is to literally poke us.
Milo just looked delighted. To him, this is the kind of thing that happens when you think positively and believe in conference table treasure.
Management textbooks have whole chapters on communication, delegation, and budgeting. There is nothing under “What To Do When Your Team Becomes Catnip-Scented Voodoo Merch.”
But that’s the job. You look at the strange thing in front of you, you take a breath, and you decide:
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Who needs protection?
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Who needs information?
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And who, exactly, ordered this nonsense?
2 thoughts on “Effigy”
Gina
Really love your Pithitude product lines. Story/Comic “Donna Lake” is also very amusing. 🙂
donnalake
Thank you, Gina!
Yes! Send this to me each Wednesday.
About Donna Lake
Acknowledged
February 18, 2026
Submit
February 11, 2026
Form
February 4, 2026
Self Love
January 28, 2026
Boss Adjacent
January 21, 2026
Waft
January 14, 2026
Effigy
January 7, 2026
Foreign Food
December 31, 2025
Party On
December 24, 2025
On the Shelf
December 17, 2025