A remote worker, posting on Reddit, criticized online bragging about minimal work hours during remote jobs, advocating for a strong work ethic. They stressed that genuinely valuing the work-from-home arrangement requires commitment and effort, warning that such bragging may contribute to return-to-office mandates. Their comments sparked a debate, with some agreeing and others defending the idea of flexible work where effectiveness, not hours, defines productivity. The situation reflects broader discussions on workplace dynamics and the perception of remote work responsibilities.
If you don't work a full 8+ hours a day, keep it to yourself.
We get it. However, I'd like to think the vast majority of us actually take WFH as a privilege that we're willing to work for.
With all of the RTO stuff going on, please stop posting all over social media how you do nothing and get away with it.
They don't pay me for 8 hours, they pay me for the work I do.
Collection
[
|
...
]