I recall my brother and I using the Electric Company formula to curse openly--until my mother caught on.
Remember the silhouettes that would face each other and one would say part of a word and the other would complete it. My brother and I would sit facing each other and he would say, "Sh.." and I would say, "it". Chased out of the house to play outside.
I worked for Microsoft about 10 years back. Unfun workplace. I thought it would be so fun to work there. I fought and got through three interviews. The team seemed cool initially. By week three I knew I had made a mistake. These people seemed so stodgy, so incapable of having a bit of fun. So utterly by the book. They almost seemed unable to deviate from the script. There was a sense of fear in the air that took a month or two to sense. I swore then I'd never work for another massive IT company and left after 6 months. I now focus on non-profits and I couldn't be happier. I get to work on cool projects that I often come up with. If I think I can build or code something better than what we have, I'm given the green light to do a working prototype. What more could I ask for? Sure, the pay is lower. But I work 8 hours and go home. There are no laborious crunch days trying to get something out the door. No meticulous, nasty meetings where everyone is playing one-upmanship, or buzzword bingo with gems like "synergistic" or using stupid phrases like "we tuned x and boom goes the dynamite", no talk of cross-functional team spearheading, no sharing an office with people who won't stop farting despite the nasty looks and obvious can of Glade.
Give me a task, a deadline, a budget, and get out of the way. I have rarely asked for a software license. I can do most things with FOSS/Linux. I may ask for a Raspberry Pi to prototype something or a slice of a VM for Ubuntu Server. These things cost almost nothing. I truly enjoy getting things done with minimal resources. It's fun working within contraints like RAM, hardware specs. I could see how embedded work would be fun in this regard.
If I'm honest, I very likely have un-diagnosed ADHD or am on the spectrum at some level. I'm most assuredly OCD. I often have an easy time getting my own office over other techs because I'm willing to sit in what amounts to a broom closet
with no windows to escape the nasty, overhead fluorescent lighting prevalent in most office settings. My username should give a hint. I love overcast skies, dark offices, and dark terminal windows and IDEs. Strangely enough, I cannot stand dark theme browsers setups. Surfing the web with a dark theme seems almost like wading through fog.
Ditto. During my college internship (1999), I worked the night shift for a certain very large OG domain name registrar. We had a nightly quota of about 200 domain names to take from being registered to the vanilla configuration. Since this was a Unix environment and I was actually learning shell scripting in college at the time, this was the perfect opportunity to script. I received permission from the greybeard running the servers to proceed with the caveat he vetted the code before making it executable. I went from taking almost 5-6 hours to doing my quota in mere minutes. My boss learned of this and told me to keep it a secret from the other techs. He then put me to work writing code to paginate reports and other things. On my last day at the job, I shared the code with everyone.