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submitted 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) by shy@lemmy.ca to c/remotework@lemmy.world

Employers across the country have been “put on notice” after a working mum won the right to not have to go into the office in a landmark decision.

Peter Devlin

4 min read October 22, 2025

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Before: Leave early → hit traffic → arrive stressed → question life choices.

Now: Wake up late → sip coffee → stroll to my desk → start the day like a functional human.

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When I first started working from home, I was so happy about the freedom, no commute, more time, and we actually proved we could get things done without sitting at a desk all day. Every other meeting had charts showing how much better we were doing.

But now it's not just about getting the job done, it's about being constantly checked on. Promotions go to the people who show up to the office a couple days a week and make just enough noise to get noticed, no matter what they really achieve.

It's so weird that the ones grinding get ignored, while the office visitors keep moving up. Feels like effort doesn't count unless someone's watching you.

Anyone else feeling this shift? How are you dealing it?

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submitted 2 weeks ago by b0ber@lemmy.world to c/remotework@lemmy.world

Companies like Google, Microsoft, and Ford know exactly what they're doing. They force people back to the office, fully aware that many will quit rather than comply. It’s a calculated move, fewer severance payouts, no unemployment costs, and a cleaner reputation than official layoffs. If they admitted the truth, there'd be backlash but frame it as "collaboration" or "culture" and suddenly no one questions it. The worst part is that the outdated boomer narrative still lets them get away with it. It's not about work it's about control and cost-cutting, wrapped in buzzwords.

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Remote Work

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