ISBN-13: 9783565231232 / Angielski / Miękka / 208 str.
Remote work doesn't just change where you work-it fundamentally alters how you experience time, connection, and selfhood. This book explores the psychological patterns beneath remote work struggles: the isolation that emerges when professional identity loses its spatial container, the guilt that makes rest impossible when your workspace is also your living space, and the exhaustion that comes from performing productivity without witnesses. It examines why standard wellness advice fails remote workers, how the promise of flexibility can become pressure for constant availability, and what your difficulty separating work from life reveals about how deeply you've internalized being productive as being worthy. Through compassionate psychological insight, it reframes remote work challenges not as time management failures but as existential disorientation. It offers perspective on the difference between solitude and disconnection, the grief of losing incidental human contact, and the quiet recalibration needed when home stops feeling like sanctuary. This isn't about optimizing your home office-it's about understanding what happens to your inner life when work becomes everywhere and nowhere.
The hardest part of working from home isn't the lack of boundaries-it's realizing how much of your sense of self depended on leaving the house and becoming someone else for eight hours.