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Amy's avatar

I’ve been working remotely for a year now. It has revolutionized everything in my life. I’ve rediscovered my passion for swimming laps, I do Zoom yoga with high school friends 7 days a week and I’ve done the best, most meaningful work of my career. Post-pandemic, I can’t wait to stretch this lifestyle further. There was definitely a transitional period in late spring-early summer 2020 when I felt neurotic about needing to LARP my job. Then a period of sadness/depression when I realized literally no one at work was paying attention to my productivity. And THEN an intense thrill when I realized the power to fly under the radar and work on my own terms was priceless. I no longer am plagued by worries that I’m underpaid or underappreciated - my job has gone from an entire identity to one, average-size piece of the pie that is my life. WFH freedom almost feels equivalent to a $50,000 raise. I hope the flexibility lasts forever.

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Amy D.'s avatar

I’m a full-time child care worker who can only fantasize about this life. Good pay and benefits at my center (rare for this field), but I spend nine hours of my day at work, giving my all to the little ones. I wish we better took the very real tolls of emotional labor and care work into account, and rethink what a reasonable number of hours (and $$) for this type of work should be. Or, if I didn’t have to worry about health insurance, I would go part-time and take up something remote/creative on the side. Because this isn’t sustainable!

Slight tangent, I know, but your depiction of ideal WFH life made my lip wobble and I’m trying to reconcile my desire for flexibility and time for creative pursuits with my passion for working with young children.

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