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Real-World Flops That Prove Failure is a Key Ingredient of Creativity
And in more direct answer to your question, I think my moods are more prone to shift and my focus more likely to wonder by having fewer people around in-person. Social media communities can be frustrating or much like the ole high school popularity contest. Real people who you work with and get real stuff done with is a much better feeling. Still, I love the freedom...
I spend quite a bit of my time on the phone with clients and have one "onsite" client that I visit physically once a month. I don't find myself feeling lonely or isolated at all. Of course, having three kids at home may impact that.
There are days when I think if I have any more "interaction" with people (*by phone or im or twitter*), I'll scream.
Most days, it's a good balance and I do feel relatively well-balanced with the home office. I'd never be able to go back to the communal office where the interruptions are constant and projects are bumped for other projects on a regular basis. I like determining the project priorities for my client work and blocking off time to get them completed.
I like being in control of my own workday. I like working at home... most days.
Thankfully my family is at home most of the day and I get that contact, but sometimes I still need to get outside and meet with other humans in a different environment.
In fact, I had some coffee time with a marketing pro on Tuesday. We could talked over the phone or through e-mail, but I purposefully set a meeting over coffee so I could feel human that day. It worked.
I found I enjoyed and appreciated human contact more than when I had to deal with it 8-5. It seems an extrovert may have the opposite reaction. A part-time collegial relationship also suits me style.
My introverted nature is much happier now but I do miss my students. So, I am going to start teaching online. I wonder if I will be able to connect as well to my online students? We'll see...
It would be interesting to see if the study took into account personality types?
Here are some tips I used to resolve these feelings for myself. These work wonders for me.
1. Take a 10 minute break every hour. And when you take that break, go outside. Sit in the sun. Say hi to a neighbor. Maybe even walk around the block. Do this every hour without fail.
2. At least 2-3 times a week leave the house for lunch. Many of us at home find it easier to work in front of the computer. Don't fall into this trap. This doesn't mean spending money necessarily, take a lunch to the park or eat at a coffee shop. You are not too busy to take some time for lunch, if you are you might think about reassessing priorities.
3. When you get that irritable feeling of cabin fever, call someone or talk to someone in the neighborhood for a few minutes. I call co-workers and discuss ideas even if I don't need to.
4. Take a class. Yoga is mine. I go once a week and look forward to it as I know I can talk with people and interact.
The best part of all of these tips for me is the fact that they don't directly involve work. I feel much better in my life knowing that work is not the centerpiece of my existence and that I can work from home without needing to use work as my only social outlet.
In most cases, the virtual water cooler is enough to keep my eyes from glazing over. Things like commenting here, messaging someone or picking up the phone are all it usually takes to recharge the batteries, even if the contact isn't as complete as facetime.
I didn't read the comments closely, but it looked as if most folks were feeling isolated and missing colleagues. Interesting, since working from home seems to be something of the holy grail.
I tend to be up and down on my work schedule... sometimes I sleep too late and it competeley messes up my schedule the next day. It's easier to just "take it easy" since you don't have a boss that gets on you when you slack off.
I get lazier more often here at home than I used to at my previous jobs. I also sometimes get depressed more easily; I miss the social aspect of working at an office and goofing around with officemates after work. But of course, there are tradeoffs as with everything...
If you want to be consistently productive, you have to really impose a work routine that you follow as religiously as you would if you were working at somebody else's company. Some may argue that that sort of goes against the perks of working at home or freelancing, but it's necessary to have a semblance of structure, if you will, to be consistently productive.
Great topic and I love the tips I have recieved.