For more than a decade, Holly Hein rode the #10 bus 45 minutes to her administrative job at Portland State University in Oregon. She would plop onto her usual spot at the back of the bus and “space out” with a book. At close of business, she would repeat the ritual in reverse.

When the pandemic struck in March, Ms. Hein felt grateful to be able to do her job remotely from home. But in time, something seemed off. “It was just a wrong feeling,” she said.

She doesn’t miss the hassle of commuting, exactly, but yearns for the clear dividing line in her weekdays.

“There needs to be a contrast,” she said, “to set off ‘home Holly’ from ‘work Holly.’”

Ms. Hein embraced a strategy to power through the remaining months of working from home: the pretend commute.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Australia’s PM rules out ‘Quad’ summit in Sydney after Biden cuts his Asia trip short

CANBERRA, Australia — Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has ruled out a…

Michigan officer to face murder charge in fatal shooting of Patrick Lyoya, prosecutor announces

A Michigan prosecutor has charged a Grand Rapids police officer who fatally…

With Great Salt Lake at rock bottom, lawmakers aim for rescue

Water volume on the Great Salt Lake has dropped by more than…

Biden to deliver remarks on the response to Hurricane Idalia and recovery efforts after Maui’s wildfires

President Joe Biden is set to deliver remarks Wednesday on the federal…