theteal wrote: » but I definitely work an extra hour from home than I would in the office.
silent_spark wrote: » Saving 4 hours of a daily commute. I’m also taking an actual full lunch hour, instead of my previous half hour at my desk. It’s pure magic. At the start of all this, I ended each work day with a 30-45 minute walk to clear my head, but that’s fallen by the wayside. Edit: We have no children, and this has a huge impact. I don’t know how working parents are coping with full time work, homeschooling and childcare.[/QUOTE] This is so true. We are all weathering the same storm but in very different boats. Both myself and my partner are involved in COVID work (not medical) and have found it a massive struggle to balance increasingly demanding jobs and childcare. We are thankful for our location, house, incomes that have made these things easier to manage, but it has definitely been a very stressful time.
Cheeseplant wrote: » I would say that I am a lot worse off time wise. I still attend work a few days a week and would go in most Saturday's to finish off tasks. Working from home is very stressful with a young family. The days I WFH, I'm at the computer about 8ish and I try to finish up about 2. My kid sits plays and watches TV for the morning. I spend the morning feeling like a bad parent as I'm not interacting with him and a bad worker as I can only really focus on sending out emails rather than any productive work. By the time he goes to bed (later than before COVID) at 930, I'm fit for nothing! I work longer days when I'm on-site but I'm trying to squeeze 5 days productivity into 3 days on-site and just easing my guilt with emails the rest of the time. One of the most stressful periods of my life I think.
listermint wrote: » Theres 7 and a half hours though between 2pm and 9:30pm .....
bloodless_coup wrote: » Why is that? I roll out of bed and switch the computer on to show i'm online, then get washed / dressed, make some coffee and eventually "start work". During the day in periods where i'm not working instead of pretending to work like you would in the office I can play computer games, do some small chores or start the dinner. I log off exactly at 5.
is_that_so wrote: » I know one self-employed Luddite who's had his eyes opened to a saving of 25 hours of travel per week by technology and distancing. I can see him choosing to hang onto most of those gains.
Technocentral wrote: » Who in their right mind wouldn't!
CrankyHaus wrote: » I can work from home whenever I want but I actually prefer the office. I have a short commute, 20 minutes today, a more comfortable, spacious and effective set-up and I get more done. Also no chance am I covering the cost of heating and coffees. I noticed I flew through milk working from home during the lockdown. That said in most cases I agree, travelling an hour or more for office work that can be done from home is silly.
Technocentral wrote: » You obviously don't mind fellow workers speaking crap all day long? I can get much more work done without that nonsense.
Pawwed Rig wrote: » I am saving about 4 hours a week commuting and about €70 per week on lunches, coffees and travel costs. Add in the work.from home tax deduction and I am up about about €330 per month. When you throw in no creche fees I am up well over a grand a month. Also getting more time with the kids. We have been out everyday to a park, beach or playground since lockdown began. When I am back in work I will get an hour in the evening with them Tired though.
JosTep wrote: » What is the working from home tax deduction - that is a new one on me Or is your employer lowering your salary €3.20 per day and giving you €3.20 per day expenses in lieu? I'm interested