Being a software engineer is a fortune in this digital age. Having an opportunity to work from the comfort of your home and getting a handsome payc...
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With work from home setup, there isnt any more a clear distinction between where you work and where you relax. For the past year, I found it really difficult to define when to “quit” for the day.
The most effective for me is folding the laptop and reading non fiction books. If the laptop is off, you cant code hehe. I also blog and lurk in dev.to
How about you? How do you “quit”
I also faced the same issue, especially when we transitioned to working remotely. I couldn't differentiate between my bedroom and work place. At times I'd find my self saying "one last bug fix on the bed or the table I'd set up". I realized I was getting drained and over time unmotivated since there was always something to be fixed. Eventually I stopped working from my room and made a makeshift home office in another part of my house. Also, "quitting" past 5:00, where I tend not to look into any work related code or code at all in general helped with the burnout. This greatly improved my efficiency and brought back the motivation I needed.
I completely agree! Creating the artificial separation in space between work and leisure can really be helpful in combatting the tendency to just keep on going and not "quit" for the day
cool. thanks for sharing Ted
I like the quitting past five. I need to do the same
Hi Raphel, thanks for your sharing how you quit. For me, it is generally going for a walk, or sometimes I also do the cooking, or sometimes I also go shopping. I mostly prefer to get the fresh air. :) :)
I read a tweet that perfectly encapsulated the feeling of working remotely in these times:
twitter.com/erinblogan/status/1364...
It's amazing how exhausting being online all the time can be.
Agreeing with what most people said about distinction between work and non-work that is getting hard to define especially with home office. I don't think work-life balance is the best keyword here are people are vastly different and satisfaction with both areas is much more important than how big they are.
I think most important is to have projects. Not work projects but personal ones – no matter what they are. Even if you want to relax, close the laptop but then don't have anything to do or think about you drift back to work stuff.
So having something to occupy the mind is #1 for actually stopping work mode. For me personally 'just resting' or quitting without a plan is a trap as I can't rest without eventually thinking about work anyway. Better to build that plastic model, paint the kitchen, go out or cook that meal.
aww. that's the trick. thanks Maximilian.
Its so easy to get burned out, when working as a programmer from home.
What works best for me is to force myself to close the computer and go out to take a walk in the nature. Its so good for emptying the brain and get some new energy.
Ya I also do the same Peter
Since HomeOffice times begun I never stopped working - some weeks way over 100 hours but I still enjoy this drive - I made a lot of money. As soon as I feel tired I will stop and break down to a relaxed speed. I have many hobbies I can dig in, to reload my batteries - so there is no problem. I did this before even it never was for such a long period of time.
It will start to be a problem if it kills your happyness.
That's right Mario. Thank you for sharing your thoughts :) :)
This works like magic
Ya :D
This right to me as well. Once upon a time I promise myself I didn't quit until I solve it!
But life and environment never let you make it.
Yes, quit to be faster!
I was this way too. Then I was getting burned out often until I realized sometimes the best thing to do is walk away for the day or even a few hours. It can make all the difference in the world!
ya that's right Steve
Ya I agree :)
I do this some times when i run into mammoth bugs
Hi Kinanee, that's good to know :). Sometimes this works like magic.
strongly resonate. i have experienced this myself. taking a break is great.
wow haha. that's true. everyone in the industry goes through this soon or later. :D :D
Ya Amelia. Just hoping this to end soon. :) :)