Figure 1: Boring. Beige. Business Wear.
One big reason I have resisted working in a traditional job is that I hate dressing up. Especially if the word "appropriately" enters the conversation.
Business casual, skirt suits, hosiery, shoes that clack? I can't stand them. I feel like I'm wearing a costume.
It's one of the many reasons I relish working from home. And why I'm so glad to live in an age when wireless connectivity makes it possible for me to wear thrift store rags 7 days a week.
The Economist has a special report on The New Nomadism, and how people are increasingly leaving the traditional workplace and flying out on wings made of wi-fi.
The report goes into great detail about how our gadgetry does threaten some social linkages that are important, but I could only think of the bright side when it comes to staying at home:
* eating your own home-cooked meal, from food sources you are aware of, that involves less packaging
* not driving (and at upwards of 3 bucks a gallon, the planet AND your wallet will breathe a sigh of relief)
* not sitting in traffic, which is a huge, boring time-waster
* taking refreshing breaks in your own garden or neighborhood
* being able to maintain home tasks like switching loads of laundry and or rising bread
* spending less on cubicle couture and wearing consignment rags or jammies to your heart's content
Some of us won't be able to work like this. If you work in a restaurant, retail store or factory, you kinda gotta be there. But for those of us in the knowledge-based industries, spending even one day at home reduces your consumption and stress level both.
Photo via Wikimedia Commons.







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