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š¤Hereās Why
Ā 1ļøā£ It takes work to set up a space thatās conducive for working. 2ļøā£ We need to make over not just our physical spaces, but our outlook as well, 3ļøā£ and seize the opportunity to embrace new ways of working. 4ļøā£ Being able to work remotely is fast becoming a core competency. 5ļøā£ A home office offers a testing ground for figuring out how, where, and when we do our best work.
š The Details
1ļøā£ It takes work to set up a space thatās conducive for working.
Building a wall between the professional and personal domains has been the fundamental project of the modern worker. The goal was work-life balance, which in theory, entails evenly splitting our energies between the office and the home. Achieving it was supposed to be the key to happiness. But after months of forced remote work due to the pandemic, we are realizing that this division was never so neat, or even feasible to begin with.
2ļøā£ We need to make over not just our physical spaces, but our outlook as well.
As we face the reality of working remotely for the foreseeable future, many are testing corners of their living quartersāfrom the kitchen table to disused swimming poolsāin their search for an optimal working spot. In thinking about their coronavirus-era home offices, people are asking: What tools do I need to do my job effectively? Does ergonomics really matter? Can I be really happy working at home? There are many aspiring gurus shilling advice, but thereās no single prescription as our living situations are vastly different. There are, however, a variety of ways for us to embrace our current circumstances and take back some control.
3ļøā£ Weāre being presented with an opportunity to embrace new ways of working.
As stressful as it is to upend our 9 to 5 routines, this year presents a rare opportunity to experiment with new configurations, from reorienting our home and supercharging our wifi, to dressing for joy and embracing ways to rechargeālike napping.
The stigma around workplace napping, Sarah Todd argues, is part and parcel of hustle culture, which valorizes self-denial and assumes (wrongly) that we produce our best work when we push ourselves nonstop. Itās also tied up with the problem of presenteeismāthe pressure that some remote workers feel to demonstrate to their colleagues and bosses that they are always available, ready to answer a Slack message or hop on a call at a momentās notice. But the reality is that weāre only human. Perhaps if we start admitting that to ourselves and one another, we can help create shifts in workplace culture to accommodate more of our humanity, too.
4ļøā£ Being able to work remotely is fast becoming a core competency.
As remote work looms beyond the pandemic, the ability to remain focused, organized, and productive at home is becoming a coveted skill. The cardinal rule is that your CV should be tailored to the position youāre applying for, but career advisors say highlighting your telecommuting experience clearly on a rĆ©sumĆ© can give applicants an advantage. They suggest emphasizing the skills your work-from-home setup requires, from the technical (such as knowledge of platforms like Slack, and Webex) to professional āsoft skillsā such as interpersonal attributes and social intelligence.
5ļøā£ A home office offers a testing ground for figuring out how, where, and when we do our best work.
More than ever, itās become clear that the established templates for office architectureāfrom open-plan layouts to cubicle farmsāneed a rethink. A home office, in essence, offers a testing ground for figuring out how, where, and when we do our best work. And when weāre finally able to report back to our old desksāeven on a part time basisāweāll hopefully have more agency to tailor the space where we spend most of our day.
šRead the field guide
How to design a happy home office
Follow these steps to supercharge your wifi
Use your remote work experience to get your next job
Why you shouldnāt feel guilty for napping while working at home
Donāt dress for comfort when working from homeādress for joy
A peek inside home offices around the world
š£ Sound off
How happy are you with your home office?
Itās one of my favorite places.
Itāll do, but I canāt wait to get back to the office.
Itās more ākids playroomā than professional work space.