Wicked Witch Security Guard: How to Stir the Pot on Night Watch
Stirring the pot is both your literal occupation and your highest professional calling. The question is not whether to stir, it's how. Done poorly, it creates chaos no one benefits from. Done well, it cultivates exactly the right amount of productive turbulence to keep an organization honest, alert, and marginally afraid of you.
Step One: Know Your Cauldron
Every institution has its own bubbling brew of office politics, simmering resentments, and unspoken protocols. Before you introduce your wooden end of a broom, spend the first few weeks just watching. Who avoids the supply closet on the third floor? Which manager lingers past midnight and leaves suspicious crumbs? What rumour, if nudged slightly, would cause the entire day shift to rethink the parking situation? Know these things. Store it all in the vast memory palace behind your eyes.
Step Two: Choose Your Ingredients with Intention
There is a meaningful difference between a drop of useful friction; the well-timed question, the raised eyebrow at a suspicious package, the pointed mention of a policy no one has read in years, and a handful of toxic disruption, which scorches the pot and stains everyone nearby. A skilled witch-guard seasons thoughtfully. A little unease keeps people vigilant. A lot makes them quit.
Good pot-stirring ingredients include: asking questions the day shift didn't think to ask, noticing patterns that don't appear in any incident report, and occasionally letting the head of compliance know that the east fire door has been propped open with a dictionary for seven days.
Bad ingredients: spreading rumours without evidence, hexing coworkers during performance review season, or sourcing drama purely for the theatre of it.
Step Three: Maintain a Neutral Expression at All Times
Your face is your most powerful tool. When things begin to simmer as a result of your quiet interventions, you must appear serene, even slightly bored. Drink your thermos tea. Sign the logbook. Nod. The cauldron stirs itself, as far as anyone can tell. You are merely the guard. You are merely watching the east corridor.
Step Four: Know When to Let it Simmer vs. When to Boil
The mature witch-guard understands that not every pot needs to boil. Some issues benefit from slow heat: a steadily growing discomfort with an inefficient procedure, a vague institutional awareness that the third-floor supply closet has odd acoustics. Other matters require a rapid, rolling boil: an actual security breach, fire, unauthorized access activity, anything involving the IT contractor who smells of sulphur and has never once swiped his badge correctly.
A Final Word on Accountability
Stirring the pot is not the same as avoiding responsibility. You stir because you care. You notice because you must. And when the brew you've been tending finally reveals what was hiding in it all along; the misappropriated budget, the forged access log, and the executive who has been using the server room for something the server room was not designed for, you do not gloat.
You file the incident report. You hand it to the appropriate authority. You return to your rounds. You are a professional. You are also a wicked witch. The two things have always been more compatible than people assume.






