I spoke with a fellow ex-JW whose wife is still a JW. She was missing some meetings, but had to get to her first meeting of the month. She needed to turn her "time" in. The elders take on a temporary craze at the beginning of the month. "I need your time," they would say to everyone in their group. People could have dropped off the face of the earth in the last 30 days for all they knew, but now they had to have their "time."
Phone calls from the hall on the first weekend of the month went like this somehow:
"Sister Smith, how are you doing? We sure missed you at today's meeting. You say your mother-in-law passed away and you were out of town for three weeks? Sorry to hear that. I'm sure we could talk more about that later, but right now I need to gather your field service time. Maybe you could just give it to me over the phone. ...WHAT? You must have talked to some of your husband's relatives at the funeral. Can't you count one hour for that?"
Many elders would ask the member to "estimate" their time because they had to have that slip of paper now.
When I moved into the final phases of a fade, I stopped turning in the one-hour reports. I didn't want to be bothered by the elders trying to hunt down a report from me, so I turned in a report three months in a row with the word "ZERO" spelled out in the column for total hours. They never called.
So let's hear some of your stories of how the pressure came to get your "time" in.