Hawke's Bay Today

Separating work from home a vital skill

- Kristin Macfarlane

For those lucky enough to still have work in the lockdown, the once-seldom task of working from home has become a normal reality for many. New Zealand has entered a state of emergency and Covid-19 alert level four, meaning apart from those working in frontline essential service industries, we’re required to live in complete lockdown.

We shouldn’t be leaving our homes or communitie­s unless we need essential services such as food from dairies or supermarke­ts, or health care.

This means the ultimate in bringing work home with you for others not on the frontline, journalist­s included.

But if you’re like me, there needs to be some level of separation between home and work to be productive in either setting.

In my case, that means taking

There needs to be some level of separation between home and work . . .

steps to trick my mind into believing the two — even though they’ve merged — do not clash.

The mug I use for my morning work coffee does not match the set in my home.

My lunch is pre-packed and sits in the fridge in a storage container — as it would in a fridge at work.

If I listen to music, it’s through headphones and not on a speaker, just like I would at work.

My desk faces a wall, with my back towards anything in my home.

I do my hair and face and get changed into work clothes, albeit with a more “casual Friday” approach.

These steps allow me to fully focus on work, in work time, even if it’s from home.

I’ve done the same for my children. They have their own (very small) dedicated learning space, a packed lunchbox and drink bottle like they would for school, and a list of educationa­l tasks and physical activities they have to complete before they can head back to their “home space” for some free their time — aka PlayStatio­n games and Tik Tok.

Their tasks also help my working from home because without them, I’d be dealing with children wanting my attention.

As we face a new reality, it’s important we find what works for each of us to get us through these uncertain times.

If you have a job you are juggling with home life, I’d say it’s something to be thankful of in our current economic climate because there’d be many who would prefer to be dealing with that “problem” than not.

Covid19.govt.nz: The Government’s official Covid-19 advisory website

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