Anxious
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Try to live east of where you drive to work, so you don't have the rising sun in your eyes in the morning, the setting sun at night. I'm retired but just came back from running an errand at the wrong time and place. Rush hour traffic! Blinding sun!
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RedBaron · M
I call an Uber. Problem solved.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@RedBaron Commuting by taxi might work by you but it'd have been very expensive for me, with a round-trip of over twenty miles five days a week! :)
RedBaron · M
@ArishMell I work at home, so I don’t commute. But I live in NYC and use Uber instead of owning a car. Much easier and cheaper.
ArishMell · 70-79, M
@RedBaron I see! Thankyou!

I think many living in and around cities like London and Manchester are in the same situation; but of course the number of people able to work at or from home is probably a small proportion of the total work-force.

I think the nature of urban office work skews the perception of journalists, etc. when they report on it, with their glib "now we all work at home" cliches.

There were a very few times when theoretically I could have worked at home for an afternoon; but otherwise my work was not at all portable.

The company carefully differentiated between working at and working from, home. I know some who did work at home occasionally, but none who could work almost entirely from home.


The choice of owning a car is more complicated. We may not need one for our daily lives of commuting, shopping and other local activities, and I walk or use buses for many of those; but as I also do, have interests and social lives very difficult without a car.