The Southland Times

Benefits of a fake commute

A fake commute can help you reclaim that precious transition time and re-establish the boundaries that have been blurred by working from home, finds Angela Haupt.

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By 8am on the first Friday in February, Chris Giza had biked 34km with a few colleagues he met on a nearby oceanfront trail – before each of them sat down at home, kilometres apart, for a virtual meeting. If he hadn’t carved out time for this ‘‘fake commute’’, he says, he wouldn’t have done anything but grab a cup of coffee before plopping down in front of his computer.

‘‘It’s almost a no-brainer,’’ Giza, a paediatric neurologis­t in Los Angeles, says about his morning bike-riding routine. ‘‘It helps you think better, it’s good for your mental health, it’s good for your physical health and it’s good for your social health.’’

Of all the things work-from-home employees might miss about pre-pandemic life, commuting wouldn’t seem to register high on the attention metre. But nearly a year after being sent home from the office, some employees have realised that losing that time in the car – or on the bus, train or street – has had some drawbacks.

Jon Jachimowic­z, an assistant professor of business administra­tion in the organisati­onal behaviour unit at Harvard Business School, says commuting provides ‘‘a temporal and spatial separation between all the different roles we play’’.

Before the pandemic, the average commute was 38 minutes each way, Jachimowic­z’s research indicates. Not only have employees lost that buffer, but they have also taken on more work: about 48 extra minutes a day.

They are also dealing with more meetings and more communicat­ion that spills into off hours, according to findings published by the National Bureau of Economic Research.

When we don’t psychologi­cally detach from work, we risk becoming exhausted and burned out, says Samantha Pieknik, a licensed clinical psychologi­st in Phoenix.

‘‘We’ve lost that time to sit with ourselves and shake everything off from the day,’’ she says. ‘‘We’re working at home and we’re sleeping at work, and it’s really confusing for our brains.’’

A fake commute, however, can help you reclaim that precious transition time and re-establish the boundaries that have been blurred by working from home, something that Giza has learned. He now ‘‘commutes’’ about 160 kilometres a week.

Of course, a fake commute doesn’t have to involve biking. You can walk, meditate, stretch or listen to an audiobook, though Jachimowic­z notes the practice is a ‘‘luxury’’ and might not be possible for everyone, such as the parents of young children.

Pieknik, who now offers telehealth services from her home rather than commuting 10 minutes to her private practice, has added a fake commute to her mornings: She drives out to get coffee.

She recommends the habit to others. ‘‘It doesn’t have to be super elaborate,’’ she says. ‘‘It’s just a matter of tricking your brain into starting a new routine.’’

Here’s how to incorporat­e a fake commute into your work-from-home day.

Find the ritual that’s right for you

There are many ways to reap the benefits of a fake commute. Like so much else, the important thing is choosing the method you’ll stick to.

Robin Gibson, a social work administra­tor in Oklahoma City, started working from home on March 16 and soon realised that it wasn’t a shortterm situation. So she resumed her old commuting routine: listening to news podcasts, such as NPR’s Up First and the New York Times’s The Daily.

‘‘It’s about an hour and a half of listening that I start when I get in the shower,’’ she says. In the evening, she decompress­es by tidying up, listening to more podcasts and writing down her plans for the next day. ‘‘I missed that time of getting myself right with the world,’’ she says.

Be strategic about timing – and strive for consistenc­y

It’s best to engage in your chosen ritual when you’re easing into and out of the workday, Jachimowic­z says. He suggests workers establish fake commutes that last at least five to 10 minutes each way and are repeated as many days of the workweek as possible.

Block out uninterrup­ted time on your calendar to help make it a priority.

Some companies are embracing this idea: Microsoft, for example, announced it was launching a ‘‘virtual commute’’ feature that allows employees using its Teams software to schedule commute time at the beginning and end of the day.

In a news release, the company said it hopes to help boost workers’ wellbeing by encouragin­g them to take breaks to reflect and recharge.

Leave home if you can

Debbie Plotnick, vice-president for mental health and systems advocacy at Mental Health America, believes those who get the most out of fake commuting are the ones who physically leave their home-turned-office.

But that doesn’t mean you have to go far: Doing yoga in the backyard or jogging around the block would suffice. Plotnick, likes to spend time in the nature surroundin­g her home.

‘‘I live in the mountains, and it’s spectacula­r,’’ she says. ‘‘I go outside and just revel in how fabulous it is.’’

Your time commuting doesn’t have to be solitary, she adds: Use part of it to call a friend or family member, which helps foster vital social connection­s.

Consider including your family

Kids who are learning virtually are missing out on their own commute time, Plotnick says.

That means they’ve lost opportunit­ies to socialise while walking, riding the school bus or having one-on-one conversati­ons with the parent dropping them off.

‘‘It’s really hard for the young folks who are feeling so isolated now,’’ she says, and a fake commute can help. ‘‘So maybe there’s a restful time families spend together.

‘‘Maybe it’s a little bit of a family meditation or a family gentle yoga practice.’’

Practice role-clarifying

Commuting is an opportunit­y to think about and plan for the role we’re transition­ing into, such as shifting from supervisor to parent, Jachimowic­z says.

Let work go at the end of the day by spending part of your fake commute reflecting on your upcoming role: what you want to make for dinner, which chores need to be done, what you’ll watch on TV.

Similarly, on a Sunday night, coax yourself out of weekend mode by making a list of what you’d like to accomplish in the week ahead.

Get serious about disconnect­ing

Fake commutes can help us transition between our roles – but the onus is on us to stay in them, rather than letting our minds drift back to other parts of the day.

‘‘It’s not just, ‘Great, all I need to do is go for a walk after work’,’’ Jachimowic­z says. ‘‘How many of us, after we transition, continue checking emails or texting? We’re like, ‘Oh, this isn’t working.’ Of course it’s working! We’re continuous­ly activating our work roles.’’

He suggests turning off your phone or silencing notificati­ons in the name of better physical, mental and emotional health.

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 ??  ?? A virtual commute on an exercise bike before starting a working-from-home day is good for physical and mental health.
A virtual commute on an exercise bike before starting a working-from-home day is good for physical and mental health.

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