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Christopher Gosz's avatar

Like so many things, I think it depends on the individual. For me, remote work is almost all benefit and no cost. I feel more productive, less stressed, spend less money filling up my car and waste less time driving. Most importantly, I find maintaining a self-care regimen (exercise, home-cooked meals, a full night's sleep) is much easier when I'm not coming home from the office every evening feeling physically and emotionally drained after being sedentary all day, dealing with silly office politics, and having a supervisor breathing down the back of my neck. When I have downtime at home, I can do other things, like household chores, instead of having to invent some redundant task for myself or my team purely for the sake of appearing busy. I end up accomplishing more in less time. Freedom, efficiency, flexibility, all major quality-of-life enhancers. That said, I've known plenty of people who really do seem to thrive in cubeland. I don't get it, just like I don't get wanting to live in a detached single family home, but I wouldn't want to take that option away from anyone. Ideally, I think everyone should be able to do what works for them. Some employers don't seem to like that because it means giving up some degree of control, but those who are willing to try it usually end up sticking with it because happier employees tend to be better employees.

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Andy's avatar

So, I only have limited direct experience with this topic, as I'm active-duty military and a major chunk of my day-to-day work requires access to classified information, which just can't be done from home really. During the height of the pandemic, when my command was trying to minimize the number of people present in the building, I did some "working from home" that was really just doing limited amounts of administrative work (personnel fitness reports, awards, etc) and some unclassified online training. Otherwise, I was more or less just hanging out at home.

My sister, on the other hand, is a full-blown work from home machine. She does medical coding (ie, telling the insurance companies what a doctor did so the doctor gets paid) and she has a fully set-up home office. Having visited her and seen her in action with this, she is very disciplined about going into that dedicated room, shutting the doors, and focusing on work. When she's done, she comes out and doesn't tend to go in unless she needs to work some more. So, in that regard, she has some of the compartmentalization that you talk about that can sometimes go missing in a work from home environment. It also helps that she and my BIL don't have any kids (other than their dogs lol).

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