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  • Whenever I'm not ar work and a work thought pops into my head I just think "they aren't paying me to think about this now" and then just start thinking about something else

  • It helps if you have a clearly defined workspace that you "leave" at the end of the day and don't use for other things. It also helps if that workspace is separated from where you normally relax and do home stuff. That basically becomes the barrier where your work stays in and home stuff stays out and vice versa.

    Beyond that, it's largely mental discipline.

    • Agreed. If you get work emails, if possible disable work email notifications while you're off the clock. Outlook's Mobile app has a function for this that was really helpful for me, for a long time I'd see emails about things happening and I'd get upset or wonder what was happening because I couldn't help but see the notifications.

      And also, this isn't a blanket recommendation because it's not a strict pro, it has cons, but smoking weed helps me because I tend to focus on the moment and become invested in what's right in front of me while I'm high, so in combination with an immersive video game I can escape to there and completely forget about work long enough to hard separate myself from my work brain.

    • It doesn’t even have to be much separation, just enough that you can mentally leave it. I work from home but don’t have space to dedicate an office.p, so set up my laptop in my dining room. However I have a deskchair I only use for work, and only use that end of the table for work. That seems to be enough for me to mentally leave when I physically leave it

      Unfortunately I get work email and slack on my phone. Slack is not a problem because it’s work only. However maybe that’s why I rarely check my personal email these days

  • I've worked from home for 8 years, and it was definitely a struggle at first. However, now I have separate systems entirely for work and for home stuff, so when it's not work time, I shut down my other computer, and also have my phone email only set to sync during work hours. If there's an emergency, they can text or call me.

  • I don't? They're very contiguous. I gotta have cannabis from work to sleep. My coworkers include friends who I want to be in touch with off the clock, people who know my wife and are always welcome in my home.

    I genuinely love my job, and my assistant manager is my best friend. If the GM wasn't so good about empowering people to do their jobs their way, I'd be incredibly vulnerable to exploitation. Instead me and my best friend are empowered to run a dispensary way better than the last management team because it's just the kind of people we are.

  • I don't. I usually just think about home all the time. Who wants to think about work?

31 comments