Telecommuting is awesome. The biggest upside to our company being bought 2 1/2 yrs ago is the ability to work from home. I don't abuse it and always get a lot more work done (no interruptions) and it's great for big projects. So, with yesterday's 9 incher, that's what I did. Randy works in downtown Boston and they said, hey, if you're not essential, don't come in. He didn't have brain surgery scheduled and neither did I (he's a regional VP and I'm a sales analyst), so we stayed home and did what we needed to get done. I always feel a little guilty or "weather-wimpy" in storms, but then I think, most employees at my corporation are women, most of them are moms, and most of them stayed home because it was a snow day. Why should I make myself a road hazard, driving like I'm 80, stressing out for over an hour both ways (usually 35 minutes) after spending forever digging the car out from my street space because of the plows, and bein
Comments
Here I'm lucky enough to have Sam's and Costco across a freeway from each other. Our "run" consists of hitting one, the other, then either looping back up the freeway to the "Supercenter" or the other way to the "Neighborhood Market". As long as we don't go at 3 in the afternoon on a Friday, it's 2 hours from out the door to back in again. Now that I get my pension check on the 1st, that's usually the run for a month except for milk, eggs and lettuce...
alan