I do not like working from home.
While I consider myself an introvert who enjoys small groups and conversations, I thrive when I’m going to work every day. I love talking to my colleagues, casually stopping by my bosses’ office, throwing ideas around with producers and just the all-around camaraderie.
Some people excel in a work-from-home environment, but not me. I’ve always known this about myself. There’s a reason I work in the fast-paced, always-changing news industry — you always have to be on your toes.
The last three months have been a completely different reality for me. I’ve been anchoring from my bedroom in Brooklyn. We live in an apartment with my two kids and three labs- it is cramped to say the least. There is always the threat of a child barging in or a dog barking indiscriminately (which has happened.)
It’s been hard. But I realized a few weeks into the COVID-19 crisis that I had to rise to the occasion and accept this as our “new normal” for now. We are the lucky ones.
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I assume many of you have some of the same anxieties I have. Will my job be OK? Will I remain relevant? How do I stay in touch with my bosses? How do I move up and ahead while I’m at home? These are questions I ask myself every day. Some of these concerns we have no control over, while others we do.
Millions of people have lost their jobs over the last three months as a result of coronavirus, and more are likely in the pipeline. And if you’re lucky enough to still have a job, you most likely feel grateful, but it doesn’t mean you aren’t worried about the future. So what can you do to stem the insecurity and stay relevant — all while isolated and working from home?









