For many people, it’s important to have a room, or at least a dedicated desk, that is only for work. You go to that room/desk for work, and when your day is over, you leave that room/desk and don’t return to it until work starts the next day.
Your entire home cannot be your workspace, otherwise you cease to have a home and only have a workspace.
That’s a you thing, I haven’t had my home lose its „hole appeal“ after years of it.
I have been 100% wfh for like 4 years and I dread the day I need to start looking for a new job, cuz I’ll inevitably have to go back into the office again.
Imho home gets tainted by WFH. It loses some of its „hole appeal“
I got a building in the back that’s my WFH location (and home brewery).
Helps me split work from home.
But even if you don’t have the physical space, it’s not to hard to set some boundaries for yourself.
I’ve found it quite easy to keep one from another, with the sole exception being other people. If you have other people around, it gets a lot harder.
For many people, it’s important to have a room, or at least a dedicated desk, that is only for work. You go to that room/desk for work, and when your day is over, you leave that room/desk and don’t return to it until work starts the next day.
Your entire home cannot be your workspace, otherwise you cease to have a home and only have a workspace.
That’s a you thing, I haven’t had my home lose its „hole appeal“ after years of it.
I have been 100% wfh for like 4 years and I dread the day I need to start looking for a new job, cuz I’ll inevitably have to go back into the office again.
I’m gonna leave the typo for hilarity purposes.
And of course it’s a me thing. I just answered OP’s question.
Fair enough, WFH is obviously not for you then, good thing for you then that no one is forcing people to WFH these days, quite the contrary.
I recognise I’m an outlier. Just wanted to share my perspective to answer your question. Also I don’t really hate wfh, I just prefer to not do it.