What price/value working close to home
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aziz_n1
Posts: 140 Member
What price or value can one place on being able to work so close to home.🤔
Lovely bright sunny day 🌤 to start March, signs of Spring everywhere.😀
Started my new job on Monday and being able, due to time saved from not having to commute, to walk to & use my gym, for a workout & shower on the way, before getting to the office.😀😀
Lovely bright sunny day 🌤 to start March, signs of Spring everywhere.😀
Started my new job on Monday and being able, due to time saved from not having to commute, to walk to & use my gym, for a workout & shower on the way, before getting to the office.😀😀
15
Replies
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Sounds amazing! It's not always just mileage, traffic can vary so much by location. Traffic was so bad where I used to live, there was a commute almost no matter how close you were. I am lucky that there is a weight room at work. I use it in the evening twice a week. I am unlucky that there is only one commercial gym in my town. I wouldn't want to pay for a membership there, too crowded, not enough equipment.0
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One of the benefits and perks of what I do and who I do it for is that I'm afforded quite a bit of freedom when it comes to where and when I work.
While I tend to prefer being in the main office most days as it makes my job easier and I prefer face-to-face interactions the option of setting up shop for the day in one of the satellite offices closer to home, or indeed working from the couch in my lounge room when the need arises is definitely appreciated.1 -
I work for myself and out of our home, and I never lose sight of how much of a leg-up that gives me when it comes to being able to exercise and eat well.1
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I used to live in London, where I had over an hour each way - mostly underground. It was awful. I now work about 4 minutes from home in (somewhat) rural Australia, and it's amazing. Kids' school is also 4 minutes away, so I can pop out to attend school things, watch cross country races, speeches, etc etc and am close enough to home that I can pop home for lunch or a quick workout or whatever. I wouldn't trade it for more money in the big city ever again, my quality of life is worth soooooo much more.6
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I used to have an hour commute each way. It was not my favorite lol. Then I started working at home (same job). At first it took a lot of getting used to as I wasn’t around people and just checking something with a coworker was way more complicated.
Then I realized I had an extra 2 hours a day that I wasn’t spending driving. And I started running and joined mfp. That was 3000+ days, 75-ish pounds, 2 marathons, and a mountain of other life changes ago.
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I work from home. I love it. Allows me to fit in gym time whenever I want. No office politics. Can stop and go for a walk or play my guitar when I want. It’s not for everyone though.0
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Have had anywhere from an 80 to 120 minute round trip commute for 40 years. You just have to make time for what is important in the rest of your life.1
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I have a walking commute to the office (2 miles) and I find it pretty beneficial.
Previous jobs where I've had to commute on a bus, I didn't really mind, as it gave me time to study or read a book. Driving I absolutely hated.0 -
I've been working at home for myself for over 10 years and I love it so much. I would take a pay decrease to stay at home if I had to choose.
There are too many benefits to list, but I enjoy the privacy, the independence, being able to workout whenever I want and I also like being able to take care of my house (such as having a hot dinner ready for my hubby when he comes home from work) and not being tired or stressed from office politics or commuting.
The only downside was at the beginning I used to snack and drink calorific drinks all day and I gained weight. But I got that under control, lost 80 pounds and have kept it off.
Good luck with your new job!5 -
I always try to live as close to my work as possible. There might be some drawbacks attached to that: smaller flat, no place to park a car, etc but I see it as an advantage as it makes life so much easier: little time spent on going to work (currently 30 minutes by bike and train, which is long for me), little time spent on cleaning, little money on heating, and not having or needing a car also saves tons of money and is good for the environment.3
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I work 1 mile from my house and it's amazing! Honestly it is why I took the job. I'm a single mom and am able to attend school events easily, be with my kids more after school and I have less stress due to the lack of commute.1
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Retired and moved to a historic bedroom community. I walk everywhere now, except grocery store- and that’s under construction.
Multiple gyms, yoga studio, all my doctors, hospital, dog park, volunteer opportunities, restaurants, art galleries, bike paths, miles of bike and hiking trails: all on my doorstep. Yay!!!!! Only put 12,000 miles on the car since moving five years ago, and the bulk of that was my daughter driving it to Florida several times.
LIFE ALTERING!!!!!!!
This is SO not my parents’ retirement!5 -
springlering62 wrote: »Retired and moved to a historic bedroom community. I walk everywhere now, except grocery store- and that’s under construction.
Multiple gyms, yoga studio, all my doctors, hospital, dog park, volunteer opportunities, restaurants, art galleries, bike paths, miles of bike and hiking trails: all on my doorstep. Yay!!!!! Only put 12,000 miles on the car since moving five years ago, and the bulk of that was my daughter driving it to Florida several times.
LIFE ALTERING!!!!!!!
This is SO not my parents’ retirement!
May I ask what a bedroom community is? Sounds like a bedroom with shared facilities like livingroom and kitchen across other bedrooms?0 -
I would hate working at home, but a short commute can be very nice (not that I have one despite it being not that far in terms of miles).
I do like that my commute is by public transportation so I can read or surf the web, and when the weather is nice and it's light longer I can bike to and from work, which I used to use as a major part of my workout (I'd take a longer route to go by the lake and add a loop to add mileage). I also used to regularly run home (it was about 6.5 miles) and might again, although I'm a little farther now.
Worst case I can get in some extra walking any time I want based on where I get on and off the L.0 -
I was working 10 hour days with a commute that was 60 minutes each way on a good day, but usually it was more like 90 minutes on average. By the time I got home, ate, settled in, I was beat, and it was practically bed time. It really affected my ability to squeeze in time for the gym, or time for myself period. Fortunately less than a year later I was offered a job 20 minutes from home. It's not around the corner, but it gave me back a LOT of time for myself. A nasty commute can affect your quality of life. That's a cost that you can't compare to salary.3
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@yirara We are a suburb of a large metropolitan southern city. We have several gorgeous historic districts, a classic American town square, and a national battlefield park. “Bedroom Community” because most people commute to the city.
I enjoy a single family home, a block or two from all this bounty. My “shared” bedroom accommodates a husband, a sweet ladylike kitty with a heart shaped chin, and the attention-seeking cat from hell. Actually, he’s from northernmost Germany but that’s a looooong story.
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Oooh! Kind of like a sleeper town. I get it.2
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Technically my office is only 10 miles away from home, but 10 miles in my city can easily take an hour. I normally take the train to work. My gym and a fitness studio I attend regularly are both walking distance from my office, though, so I actually prefer going into the office so I can get in a workout easily. The days I work from home it's much harder to fit in a gym workout.0
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After having the Commute From Hell when I first moved to S Florida, I've made a short commute a priority and have been working remotely since 2011. I'm in MA now, and could earn a higher salary if I were willing to commute to Boston, but I'm not.
I work in my pjs until lunch time, at which point I change into exercise clothes. During gardening season, I can take gardening breaks This time of year, when it's not raining, I can walk on the trails behind my house, and when I have more time drive to a nearby state park and hike.3 -
Thanks for all the responses. Been really interesting reading them all and everyone’s views/comments and own experiences.
Just to let all know, I have taken a pay cut to take this job but have now freed myself from the commuting stress that was driving anything between 1-3hrs depending on departure time & traffic volumes. So against the pay cut, I’m balancing the time saved/gained & monetary savings from not using my car to commute. Also other benefits of going back into the Public Sector, like more leave and a better pension scheme. Also, the job itself as a Civil Engineer, involves a lot of walking at times during the day, such as today on a site inspection.
Thanks for the good luck messages .
Naveed4
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