One of the best things about working in an office is that
when your personal life seems chaotic you can escape to work, and when work is
chaotic you can escape to home. Unfortunately, when you work from home there is
no escape. Cue the scary, horror movie
music.
One of my better plans when I started working from home was
to try and keep things separate. I keep
everything work related on my work computer and everything home/personal on my
home computer. Heck, I even have two separate
desks. Unfortunately, since my office
space is limited the desks sit next to each other. Today is one of those overwhelming days where
both desks are stacked high with stuff that needs doing. I’m trying to focus on work, but out of the
corner of my eye I see the stack of bills that need paying. If I take a break
to work on home stuff, I can’t help but see the emails rolling in on the work
computer. Now, I know that conventional
wisdom would say to turn off the email notification, but since I support a
crucial software system I have to at least scan emails when they come in.
Not me. Not my desk. But a very good representation of what it feels like.
When I started working from home I naively thought there
would be few distractions. Boy, was I
wrong! The distractions are different
from what you get in an office, but they are still there. My older dog thinks
it is her sworn duty to bark at everything that passes by her window. My
younger dog doesn’t understand why I won’t take her for walks whenever she
wants, so she gets whiny. Telemarketers
call all day long, but I at least got smart and turned off the ringer on the
home phone. We live near a busy road, so
there are traffic noises and sirens all day long. I feel like that old commercial, “Calgon,
take me away”!
So, there is my confession. Working from home is not all sunshine
and roses. It can be filled with distractions and on a bad day there is no
escape from chaos. Oh well, time to stop
distracting myself with the blog and dive back in!