Anyone else come in to such a joyous email this morning?
Happy Friday!!
Happy Friday!!
We went back week in week out around 2 months ago, it's really not necessary, and if I was able to control it, I would be in your boat.I’ve been predominantly working from home since last March. With just the occasional visit to the office or site.
I’ve no intention of going back to working full time in an office.
Anyone else come in to such a joyous email this morning?
Happy Friday!!
I'm in work every day, have been throughout. That suits me to be honest, I'd struggle working from home. For those that do, how do you find separating home from work, switching off? Are you able to have a separate room for work, an office in effect, or are you on the kitchen table or equivalent.
Does the dislike for working in an office / building partly come from a pain of a commute?
I'm in work every day, have been throughout. That suits me to be honest, I'd struggle working from home. For those that do, how do you find separating home from work, switching off? Are you able to have a separate room for work, an office in effect, or are you on the kitchen table or equivalent.
Does the dislike for working in an office / building partly come from a pain of a commute?
Our conservatory is my office, my desk is essentially a dining table so plenty of space, have a monitor that was couriered to me from the office in the first lockdown last year, so the set-up is all good. Avoiding commuting is certainly the best part - when it was peak pandemic, I was not that concerned about catching it in the office, but more worried about the sheer number of people on the tubes. I don't have a problem separating really, I'm quite happy to shut down the laptop at 5pm and leave it there.I'm in work every day, have been throughout. That suits me to be honest, I'd struggle working from home. For those that do, how do you find separating home from work, switching off? Are you able to have a separate room for work, an office in effect, or are you on the kitchen table or equivalent.
Does the dislike for working in an office / building partly come from a pain of a commute?
We are really lucky in that we have plenty of room for a separate office for Mrs S in the small single bedroom - means she can shut the door after work and not worry. I have to set up the 2nd bedroom (dressing room!) but have a proper desk and chair. Only slight downside is I have to pack up the laptop and monitor each day but nothing too arduous. I do know of work colleagues who are still trying to work on tables or worse, their lap, don't think I could put up with that. Work did provide a lot of equipment but I bought my own as Mrs S wanted a desk that was more like a dressing table and didn't look like work stuffI'm in work every day, have been throughout. That suits me to be honest, I'd struggle working from home. For those that do, how do you find separating home from work, switching off? Are you able to have a separate room for work, an office in effect, or are you on the kitchen table or equivalent.
Does the dislike for working in an office / building partly come from a pain of a commute?
I'm divorced and have a spare bedroom that is set up with a desk, double monitors, and duplicate copies of any paperwork I need as reference from work. I need to be in the office half a day every 3 weeks, wouldn't quite be possible to ever be fully from home, but certainly moreso than the 50/50 we were offered.I'm in work every day, have been throughout. That suits me to be honest, I'd struggle working from home. For those that do, how do you find separating home from work, switching off? Are you able to have a separate room for work, an office in effect, or are you on the kitchen table or equivalent.
Does the dislike for working in an office / building partly come from a pain of a commute?