All I know is that one should never mix romance and and business. I would never date anyone on my team even if I was attracted to them, the in-team dynamics would strain the relationship, and the side romance would interfere with work decisions.
9-5 clock-in jobs like table waiting and bussing are different in that the workers don't usually have a stake in the goings on of the business itself, so dating has little effect on romance and work.
As for me, all of my friends are through after-work activities and clubs. Places where I am actually hanging out with people I want to be with. Places I also have more time for because I'm not wasting 1.5 hours on a commute each day. If that doesn't work for you, watershed places like bars are still excellent places to meet people.
If you're interacting with customers, then that's not wholly a desk job and wouldn't make sense to do remote. Plenty of jobs have no customer interaction, and remote work keeps 90% of discourse strictly professional, as it should be.
Also the lost cost of productivity caused commuting
Playgrounds died to, " safety".
Worth it for the gas money
Remote work is 100x better than working in office for any desk job. Nothing will change my mind on that.
Don't make work your social hotspot, it is is full of yes-men and and fake people. Go outside and actually make friends, who will be real friends.
All I know is that one should never mix romance and and business. I would never date anyone on my team even if I was attracted to them, the in-team dynamics would strain the relationship, and the side romance would interfere with work decisions.
9-5 clock-in jobs like table waiting and bussing are different in that the workers don't usually have a stake in the goings on of the business itself, so dating has little effect on romance and work.
As for me, all of my friends are through after-work activities and clubs. Places where I am actually hanging out with people I want to be with. Places I also have more time for because I'm not wasting 1.5 hours on a commute each day. If that doesn't work for you, watershed places like bars are still excellent places to meet people.
If you're interacting with customers, then that's not wholly a desk job and wouldn't make sense to do remote. Plenty of jobs have no customer interaction, and remote work keeps 90% of discourse strictly professional, as it should be.