Perhaps in some ways, being at home is not so much the problem, but a reconnection with home life and other priorities suddenly opens their eyes to how much they actually, significantly hate their jobs. They used to have to 'go to work' and so exist in another environment, but now that they've discovered what other things they could be …
Perhaps in some ways, being at home is not so much the problem, but a reconnection with home life and other priorities suddenly opens their eyes to how much they actually, significantly hate their jobs. They used to have to 'go to work' and so exist in another environment, but now that they've discovered what other things they could be doing instead of being glued to zoom, work just sucks.
I'm not sure the whole problem is the inability to switch off or the intrusion of work into home (though that is a problem), I think it is also that now work is seen as literally and constantly interrupting home life, rather than originally where home life interrupted work (kids and pets video-bombing).
Perhaps in some ways, being at home is not so much the problem, but a reconnection with home life and other priorities suddenly opens their eyes to how much they actually, significantly hate their jobs. They used to have to 'go to work' and so exist in another environment, but now that they've discovered what other things they could be doing instead of being glued to zoom, work just sucks.
I'm not sure the whole problem is the inability to switch off or the intrusion of work into home (though that is a problem), I think it is also that now work is seen as literally and constantly interrupting home life, rather than originally where home life interrupted work (kids and pets video-bombing).