• @ObsidianZed
    link
    62 days ago

    I get a similar feeling seeing posts like this. I did work from home briefly as I worked in IT for a bank, but as soon as that wasn’t required, they had us coming back in.

    I see posts like this and it makes it seem like there were many that stayed home for months. I don’t even have a concept of how long the average person stayed home. Was it a weeks? months?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      14 hours ago

      I have a friend who worked at a gym when COVID happened, and they were closed for like 6 months or something, but what I saw was a lot of what I called “rolling lockdowns” - one town would go into quarantine for a few weeks as daily cases hit a certain point, but the town next to them would be business as usual. And then another town would do the same, rinse and repeat, but never a mass quarantine across the state.

      The other thing I saw a lot of was wealthy people fleeing cities to get away from COVID (and bringing it with them) and buying property in vacation towns not built to be lived in year-round. It didn’t take a full year for most to get bored of living there outside the vacation season and go back, but property values doubled during the craze and never really came back down. I think to this day, they’re still roughly 50% above what they were before quarantine. And they were already too high for locals to afford.

    • Gabe Bell
      link
      English
      52 days ago

      Not sure I am an average person (not in a bragging way – literally don’t know if this is average or not) but I think most of our company worked from home for about eighteen months, give or take.

      This was in the UK, so maybe we had different rules and coverage.

      • @ObsidianZed
        link
        22 days ago

        Holy hell, yeah I didn’t even realize some were sent home for longer than a year. Of course, it’s almost needless to say but I’m in the US where they care (that we make them money).