• @haych@feddit.uk
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    403 days ago

    childless men miss sense of community

    Myself and everyone I know works remote. We’re all childless/childfree and not a single one of us miss any community, we all feel there are zero downsides to it. This just comes across like propaganda to stop people working remote and return to office.

    • @douglasg14b@programming.dev
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      3 days ago

      I work remote (Going on 9 years now) and I miss a sense of community. Do I want to stop working remotely? Hell no, screw that. But two things can be true the same time, I can enjoy and encourage them at work, dnd I can also miss a sense of community.

      I think it’s okay to hold this opinion because it’s individual to everyone.

      This just comes across as propaganda

      Being dismissive and pulling the rhetoric that this is propaganda is toxic as fuck.

    • @lightnsfw@reddthat.com
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      163 days ago

      I’m single and childless and I personally like being hybrid. Full work from home fucks my mental health up pretty bad. I’m definitely in the minority among my peers though. I also wouldn’t ever ask that anyone else be forced to come back to the office just because it isn’t for me.

      • @RedPostItNote@lemmy.world
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        33 days ago

        I go in office when I want to, a few hours a day or a few times a week for a couple hours. But full work from home had me talking to myself… way too much.

    • @Leg@sh.itjust.works
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      103 days ago

      Yeah, every sense of community I’ve ever felt with a job was also ruined by that same job. I don’t remotely miss it, and I’m firmly child-free.

    • @owsei@programming.dev
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      93 days ago

      I agree that forcing return to office is either stupid or harmful. But I do like the people I work with, and not seeing them anymore would be saddening

      The solution is obvious though, simply allow choice

    • @Auth@lemmy.world
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      23 days ago

      I have friends and live with friends and I still feel lonely when working remotely. I like hybrid the most because sometimes i need to just go into work and talk about the things im working on with people who actually understand (not work related talks just for fun)

      • @Breezy@lemmy.world
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        12 days ago

        So you like to go into work in order to waste time talking talking about non work related things? Make sense why you should stay remote.

        • @Auth@lemmy.world
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          12 days ago

          Its not a waste of time, its very useful. I can see how a robot such as yourself wouldnt understand.

          You can spend your 8 hours a day in a cubicle and I will spend it having fun and working along side people I genuinely like.

  • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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    263 days ago

    Best thing about working from home is stepping away from my desk, popping upstairs, and tossing my little baby boy up in the air a few times while he giggles and smiles.

    • @dotslashme@infosec.pub
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      804 days ago

      Same, but I do have my own community away from work and have always prioritized my friends over co-workers.

    • fmstrat
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      254 days ago

      Let’s fix this headline:

      Remote work benefits all in different ways.

      • adr1an
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        54 days ago

        Oh c’mon the headline is clear. Get pregante XOR go home!

    • Cyberwolf
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      84 days ago

      What community? Getting whipped along with your work colleagues? I swear these studies are totally sponsored by some business interests.

    • FlashMobOfOne
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      44 days ago

      Agreed. This article sounds like the kind of BS corporate media’s trying to parrot to gaslight us into giving up WFH.

  • oppy1984
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    474 days ago

    41 year old male, no kids, no wife or girlfriend, been work from home for 5 years now. I’ve never been happier and more productive.

    I get my sense of community from my friends not my coworkers. This study is B.S.

    • Rachel
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      313 days ago

      You know there are always outliers because research often looks at populations in general and not the exact experience of a specific person. Unless it’s a case study but that’s different.

      Either way that’s a really good thing for you, the modern world makes it difficult to make and keep close to friends.

      • oppy1984
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        23 days ago

        True, and I was drawing on anecdotal evidence that I didn’t elaborate on in my original comment. While I know there are people who do not do well or enjoy work from home, I have yet to meet those people, all my coworkers and friend group are loving work from home.

        So a more accurate statement would have been, based on my personal experience along with with coworkers and my friend circle this study is B.S.

        • @wellheh@lemmy.sdf.org
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          43 days ago

          Tbf there’s definitely some confirmation bias in there because a person who didn’t enjoy being remote probably wouldn’t seek that type of job

          • oppy1984
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            13 days ago

            True, but we were full time in the office before lockdown and at least half the staff is from before lockdown. Also our job listings are for hybrid positions since there is a rarely enforced office mandate.

        • @AWistfulNihilist@lemmy.world
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          03 days ago

          I was and am in a situation where WFM became voluntary because we outgrew the space while everyone was at home.

          We have no limit of volunteers to work in the office, we have multiple people who never left the office, they continued to commute and went in every day.

          So my anecdotal experience is the exact opposite of yours, which is why we don’t put a ton of stock in them and look at aggregates in studies. Making sense?

    • @KumaSudosa@feddit.dk
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      73 days ago

      Just because you have anecdotal evidence of the contrary doesn’t mean it can’t be true, quantitatively. I, too, am a childless man - although I do have a wife - and don’t resonate with this, but that doesn’t mean I’ll just cast aside the findings. Many, especially young, men are unhappy in their everyday, partly due to a lack of sense od community in the “modern” world.

    • @MashedTech@lemmy.world
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      103 days ago

      Yeah, you gotta have friends that are close by and you can get out with or they can come over. If you don’t… Sometimes it feels lonely. But to be honest, you kinda get used to it.

  • @jpreston2005@lemmy.world
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    183 days ago

    The ability to work from home has given me innumerable benefits, but I must admit that as a very introverted guy who’s been going through some shit, and who’s go-to move during times of anxiety and depression is to distance themselves from everyone… yeah, sometimes I do miss my coworkers. A lot of them are pretty great people. Doesn’t mean I’d rather spend 3 hours a day sitting in traffic to see them, just means I low-key miss someone to bitch with.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      In theory, we have the Third Space for that kind of socializing. Parks, plazas, union halls, club spaces and dance halls, churches, community centers, libraries…

      In practice, they’ve been gradually privatized and monetized until everything is The Mall. If you don’t have $10 to spend for the hour, there’s nowhere you can legally so much as sit down. Hard to socialize on these terms.

      My city decided to take its $7B budget and close a $330M shortfall by gutting parks, libraries, and other public amenities. Meanwhile, the police and fire departments are seeing a budget surge of over $100M.

        • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          John Witmire is a DINO by every definition of the word. He’s deep in bed with the police, he loves privatization of public services, and he makes common cause with the state’s Republican leadership on a regular basis. Nothing the man loves more than “balancing the budget” on the backs of public workers and low income residents.

          But he’s been a Democrat since he took his State Senate seat and squatted in it back in 1983. So the party apparatus loyally and mechanically supported him all through the primary and general elections. The “It’s my turn” candidate is taking his turn.

  • @RedAggroBest@lemmy.world
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    173 days ago

    Itt: cognitive disonannce.

    The study isn’t bs. Lemmy users just won’t accept that they don’t even come close to representing the average individual.

    • Echo Dot
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      3 days ago

      Or if we use less adversarial language, this study is far from universal and its findings should be applied with the understanding that not all people will not match those who were in the study. As with most things, far more research is needed to get a thorough understanding.

      • @RedAggroBest@lemmy.world
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        117 hours ago

        Nah, I’d say this fits solidly in the category of “heaps of research indicating that single men suffer more in situations that promote isolation”. Adversarial language or not, the average Lemmy users is so far in their own social phobia that they don’t register that most humans, being social animals, thrive with MORE interaction and not less.

    • @UnderpantsWeevil@lemmy.world
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      3 days ago

      The study isn’t bs.

      There’s a lot of “I’m childless and proud and how dare you suggest living in isolation and screaming at my computer screen all day has had any negative impact on my mental health. You’re just trying to trick me into breeding! A thing I became intensely averse to just recently, after spending 16 hours a day on incel forums full of reactionary influencers.”

      So much of the knee-jerk ingrained responses online are indicative of people who have utterly lost the ability to think for themselves and are only capable of lashing out in defense of their latest favorite social media trend. Add in the artificial interactions created by bot accounts and people spamming content for self-promotion, and you’ve got a real recipe for mass psychosis.

  • ideonek
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    1264 days ago

    Come on, work being the sole source of community is the problem here. What are we even talking about?

    • @flamingo_pinyata@sopuli.xyz
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      274 days ago

      Yes, but it’s also the most logical place. What other activity do you dedicate so much time to? Maybe sleeping but it’s hard to build a community around that.

      • ideonek
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        364 days ago

        According to my kids, candies are the most logical place to get most your nutritions from. Where else could you get so many calories?

        If most of your time at work is spent socializing, couldn’t you cut your work time and build your community elsewhere?

        If most of your time at work you spent on honest hard-work working, how much community are you really building?

        Cut you calories. Life doesn’t happen at work.

        • @Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          74 days ago

          Eh, I became a stay at home mom over the pandemic, and while I’ve never worked in an office, but on the shop floor, I do miss the shenanigans. But its almost like a trauma bond, where its like, hey, we’re all stuck here, best make the nest of it and try snd have fun while we are here.

          I’m fully isolated now, and at this point terrified of crowds, when i never was before.

          Not arguing at all people who can work remotely shouldn’t, they should, for a litter or reasons. But I do miss my coworkers from my employee owned factory where culture was held in high standard. Im also not arguing this should be the only place one finds community, I’m only saying, for a person like me, it helped sometimes to joke around on the new guy or collectively bitch about issues at work or hear other folks problems and offer advice or help when I could.

          We socialized outside of work too. I can’t get invited to a party, or a wedding, or anything if I literally don’t know anyone. I’ve only ever known how to make friends in structured environments. But that’s wierdo me.

          • ideonek
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            44 days ago

            No, I think that’s the fair take. But to me, it’s similar when people say “Studies may teach me a thing, but I’m glad I went there because I met all this people”… Yes, you spent X years there. You’d probably bound with someone over that time if it was a different place as well. It’s perfectly understandable to have a need for structure. I just wish that work isnt that sole source of structure in most people live.

      • @6nk06@sh.itjust.works
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        154 days ago

        It would be logical to work less and get our own community. A lot of people work hard all their lives and die soon after retirement. That’s not logical.

      • @Saleh@feddit.org
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        64 days ago

        Quality over quantity.

        Great places to socialize are sports-clubs, social-clubs, volunteering, activism, religious communities…

        I’d much rather spend five hours a week distributed over two or three occasions with people i share interests with, than with people i share work with. Meanwhile at work i am mostly engaged in small talk, that is quite repetitive as i see the people every day and i have to guard what i can say and what i cannot say more than in other circles.

    • @5in1k@lemm.ee
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      33 days ago

      A lack of non alcoholic third spaces is what I would like to talk about.

    • @scarabic@lemmy.world
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      74 days ago

      No one said “sole.” It’s about a sense of community between you and your coworkers, which is a very real and normal thing. It’s spelled out in the article very clearly:

      losing that sense of workplace community had a greater impact on childless men

      “Workplace community.”

      I’m a dad working remote and I love the benefits but I ALSO miss the sense of community with my coworkers which I used to get from lunches together, sharing the train ride home, or just working side by side at our desks.

      • ideonek
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        13 days ago

        hmm, so having or not having kids have impact on your sence of workplace community during remote work?

        Does it add up to you?

          • ideonek
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            03 days ago

            I like to think I would less judgmental about people attepting to communicate with me in the only language I know. Maybe approach like that is the reason work is the only place where people spent time with you ;)

            • @scarabic@lemmy.world
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              13 days ago

              Your comment was unintelligible, sorry. I can hear you whining now, very clearly, and trying to insult me personally. So I guess you can communicate successfully when you try.

              • ideonek
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                03 days ago

                I’m glad you understood me know, thank you. I adapted your approach to learning languages - speaking slow and laudly. It worked like a charm.

    • snooggums
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      4 days ago

      I have more time to spend with the community that isn’t tied to my income.

      Also a father, so double benefits!

    • @Tehbaz@lemmy.wtf
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      74 days ago

      Same here, much prefer the peace and quiet as well as avoiding the complication & stress of maintaining a personal relationship that may or may not last. As long as I have my dog with me I’m never lonely.

  • PhobosAnomaly
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    4 days ago

    I know this a gross oversimplification, but:

    “Remote working benefit those with a reason to stay home, but doesn’t for those who don’t have a reason to stay home” seems to be the general idea of the headline.

    edit: I think this is the study they’re talking about, please double check the source before quoting: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36718392/

    • @Dave@lemmy.nz
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      284 days ago

      This was also my experience during the main sweep of the pandemic. It was so great getting to cut the commute and be home. Something I have luckily managed to largely continue. Prior to the pandemic my kid was in daycare pretty much 7:30-5:30 so it was really nice to not have to do that, plus during our lockdown we used to go for a family walk at lunchtime.

      While some of the single guys I worked with hated staying home and were straight back in the office the moment they were allowed.

      • @Saff@lemmy.ml
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        154 days ago

        Yeah I went 3 months without having a single face to face conversation with someone, it was pretty shit even with online gaming and discord.

        • @Damage@feddit.it
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          44 days ago

          During the pandemic my partner stayed inside for about a month, I was the only person she interacted with. I kept going to work because I was an “essential” worker (not really), so I kinda envied her, but by the end of that month she was going a bit crazy.

              • @n0face@lemmy.wtf
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                12 days ago

                Good, then go socialize.

                The issue is that people that want socialization complain that those who enjoy solitude don’t want to socialize with them, so those that prefer solitude should be forced into the office instead.

                It’s a really odd thing. Stop relying on work to satisfy your socialization needs. Try a hobby instead. Anything should do - Magic the Gathering, Warhammer 40k, Tabletop RPG, sports, dance classes, anything.

              • @Ledericas@lemm.ee
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                13 days ago

                the reasons they give are often super selfish, it was asked on many subs over the pandemic, they want to interact with said co-workers even if its unproductive and said coworkers do not want to make chit chat with said male workers.

      • @Atonable8938@lemmy.zip
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        23 days ago

        I think it’s funny that I had the opposite experience. My coworkers who had kids couldn’t wait to get back to the office, while the few of us youngsters who didn’t wanted nothing but to keep working remotely. Probably why those few of us left immediately when it became clear they were going to force everyone back.

        • @Dave@lemmy.nz
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          13 days ago

          It may be both a factor of who you live with (the ones itching to get back to the office either lived alone or with people they didn’t really gel with), and could have also been the length of time we were in lockdown (we had one of the strongest in the world - for the first 6 weeks or so even McDonald’s wasn’t allowed to open). After a couple of months of not being allowed to leave the house and having no face to face contact with friends or family, I can understand the desire to get back to the office. The people I have in mind mostly lived close to the office, too.

          One other factor may have been that our remote working infrastructure was in no way ready for the entire organisation to work from home with a couple of day’s notice. Video calls were just not possible for the first stretch as the work computers were all VPNed through a potato.

    • @Ledericas@lemm.ee
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      3 days ago

      oh yea heard this question asked in reddit on multiple instances, the ones that dont stay at home tend to waste time at watercooler chat, gossip,etc, not productive work, just that interaction they cant live without.

      • PhobosAnomaly
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        13 days ago

        I’m guessing you’ve got a study that backs that assertion up as well?

  • @NABDad@lemmy.world
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    644 days ago

    My oldest has no children and works fully remote.

    When the pandemic started, his company decided to have everyone work from home. They very quickly discovered that they were just as productive, and the owner decided it made sense to dump their office space.

    A group of employees decided to go on vacation together, while still working. Since they are all remote, they didn’t actually have to work from home. They got an Airbnb with good Internet, worked during the day, and saw the sites and had fun together after work.

    If you’re remote and you miss that sense of community, reach out to your coworkers and ask them if they want to hang out after work. It’s possible they don’t and you’ll be disappointed. It’s also possible that they feel the same way but didn’t know they could do something about it.

    Either you’ll be the hero that saved everyone from their solitary existence, or you’ll have to accept that they don’t want to hang out with you.

    • CodexArcanum
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      124 days ago

      This is a good idea, but also working remote frees up time to meet new affinity groups.

      Not to dump on people’s relaxation strategies, but even the most introverted person can’t survive on video games and gooning alone.

      If you don’t want or like hanging with coworkers, find a local bar to hang out at and meet some folks, go to a community board game night, join a choir, attend an anime viewing night, just do something to take initiative and meet some folks that like what you like.

  • scytale
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    624 days ago

    Another person already said it, but the issue is the lack of third spaces. You don’t need to physically go to an office to get a sense of community. Working remotely makes it easier to get a sense of community if there are third spaces because you’re not stuck in a building for 8 hours. If your only source of community is your workplace, then you have other problems.

  • @FourWaveforms@lemm.ee
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    254 days ago

    I’m a childless man and FUCK that, the office isn’t my social scene. I don’t care to drive in there just to talk to the same people in person. ZERO point in doing that. We have meetings electronically and that’s more than enough.

    • @npcknapsack@lemmy.ca
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      94 days ago

      You mean, you, a presumably young man, don’t come to the office to chat with your 50 year old office mom, or your CEOs and managers, or your coworkers whose interests only overlap yours so far as employment opportunities? How bizarre!

        • @npcknapsack@lemmy.ca
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          12 days ago

          Ah, then maybe you would enjoy talking to the 50 year old office mom!

          Assuming those are still a thing, of course. They were a thing when my office’s age averaged ~ 25, but I seem to remember losing the office mom position when the overall office age got higher… but maybe the position went away more generally…

          • @FourWaveforms@lemm.ee
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            110 hours ago

            I actually wouldn’t enjoy talking to most people at work, because that would involve going there instead of doing it from the computer where I already am

  • Echo Dot
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    103 days ago

    I actually don’t like my coworkers very much I definitely wouldn’t hang out with them so not having to be near them all day is a benefit.

    It’s not even that they are bad people, it’s just that they are people who I wouldn’t choose to hang out with.