We Need a Remote Work Commute

Perhaps commuting wasn’t so bad after all

Stephen Moore
Index

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Photo: Ketut Subiyanto/Pexels

Your train is running behind schedule, and you’re going to be late for work for the second time this week. Worse, you got drenched on the walk to the station, and you can already smell the damp from your shoes. You look inside your sodden bag and realize you forgot your lunch. It’s only early morning, and you already wish the day was over. To make matters worse, you’ll have to repeat this ritual in around 9 hours, stuck shoulder to shoulder with other disgruntled passengers all just desperate to get home.

When the world of work went remote, I, like many others, rejoiced at the prospect of regaining the time I typically spent commuting. It was universally hated afterall. Research from 2006 showed the morning commute between home and the office was the least enjoyable activity of the day, while the return journey was not far behind. I can be forgiven for bragging about this quarantine-benefit in my search for silver linings in the earlier days of lockdown. “I’ve got an extra 3 hours a day back, think of how productive I’m going to be!” I dreamed of finally getting round to projects and activities that had long sat on the back burner.

In reality, converting that time into something beneficial was challenging; often, it was a complete failure. And, the longer I go commute-less…

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Stephen Moore
Index

Writer, editor, part-time furniture maker. Subscribe to Trend Mill for critical takes on our dystopian metaverse hellscape future - https://www.trend-mill.com