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I work from home and most of that article rings true. Because of my personality, I don't feel lonely, but sometimes in the morning I do want to watch the news or something on youtube in the background just to break "the silence" of sleep and getting ready to sit down at my desk.

All-in-all though I really enjoy working from home. Sure beats some open-office environment. I guess in an "ideal" situation we'd have a conference room/shared space to bring laptops to if we wanted to, but we just end up meeting at a bar or restaurant, bring our laptops, when we feel the need for face-to-face.

>After interviewing everyone from a professional juggler to a building surveyor who worked out of a garden shed, Holliss found some common disadvantages and negative impacts: mental health suffered (anxiety, stress, depression), isolation was rife (not being in a team), and it was hard to have self-discipline (proximity of the fridge and biscuit tin; not enough exercise; difficulty in setting boundaries between work and life).

My working from home experience has been the complete opposite. In fact, these tend to be "negative impacts" I've experienced in open-office environments.