I didn't think the duty itself irritating, to me it was new and interesting, I would have quite liked to have been picked. I imagine most people would find it irritating, as it interrupts the Real Lives that they're living for something unrelated, where as for me I enjoy it because it interrupts my quote unquote "Real Life" for something actually important.
One thing that vaguely bothered me as well, was that there was a coffee station in the room. The person who was explaining everything to us was doing so in a laborious and detailed way, and during that spiel I just got up, went over to the coffee station, and poured myself some coffee; everyone saw me doing so, and noone minded. Noone else got up to do the same, despite their being 30-40 people in the room, so I even consciously thought "Noone wants any coffee but me, I suppose." However, once the Speaker finished up, and I had had my coffee for 5 or so minutes now by this point, she says people can get some coffee, if they'd like, and then spontaneously a line forms around the coffee station. I was mildly flabbergasted, why did they wait to be invited to get coffee? What was so important about being told that enabled them to actually do it? What I envy about the kind of normalcy I'm always complaining I don't have, is that I feel it empowers and gives freedom, freedom to actually live a real life, whereas I feel I'm trapped in a prison of my own creation that I can't disassemble. Again, I just want to suss out the reasoning in their heads, I wanted to ask them, but I didn't speak to anyone, I remained almost totally silent for almost the entire 3-4 hours of sitting around. I'm irritated at that paradox, if anything.
EDIT: I'm spent all last night thinking about how to articulate the exact idea better, rather than just insisting on my irrational garbage, and the more I think about it the more I think I'm just wallowing in my own bullshit.