FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

One of the few things I don’t hate about my job is it’s a 10-minute commute down an empty highway.

dansity,

I walk next door. I like that its close by and I can spend my lunchtime laying on my couch. I hate its close by so I’m practically always working. I would also want to listen podcasts during commute but all of them are too long for my commute. Overall I recommend living close to work. (it’s my own business, I’m not employee)

ares35,
ares35 avatar

you're 'practically always working' because it's your own business, too, not just because you live next door.

thelsim,
@thelsim@sh.itjust.works avatar

I really like the 20 min walk to the train station, it partly goes through a park and it always feels very invigorating. It takes about an hour total to get to work or home but I don’t mind at all since it gives me a clean break between work- and private life.
One thing I really hate is when the train is cancelled and I’m stuck with only a tightly packed bus as my alternative for getting home.

mapleseedfall,

How often does the train is cancelled in say a month?

thelsim,
@thelsim@sh.itjust.works avatar

Well, you got two kinds of cancellations. Sometimes it’s just a single train because of… reasons… I don’t know. Those aren’t so bad, you just wait for the next one to leave in half an hour. It happens maybe once a month?
The worse ones are when there’s a defect in the rail system, knocking out the entire rail line going home. In those cases you have to travel extra to get to a bus that everyone is desperate to get on. Which causes a lot of shoving and squeezing and very uncomfortable traveling. The alternative is either to get a (ridiculously expensive) taxi or to wait it out for several hours, which is not an option for me. These kind of events only happen a few times as year thankfully, but they’re really awful when they happen.
The thing is, I have to pick up my kids from daycare so I need to get back on time. A major cancellation puts me in an enormous stress mode.

FlyingSquid,
@FlyingSquid@lemmy.world avatar

I would be happy with a train commute. I could get in some reading. I don’t know why so many people have to get to where they’re going so fast. Alas, no trains here. Not even a bus that comes within 2 miles of me.

randomTingler,

Morning: I drop my kid at school & return home. Travel distance: 9Km Time: 20 to 30 mins, depending on traffic.

Evening: I pick my wife from her work, then pick my kid on the way home. Travel distance: 19km Time: 40 to 50 mins, again depending on traffic

The average speed is 20+ kmph.

I work from home.

GreyShuck,
@GreyShuck@feddit.uk avatar

I am fairly happy with mine. It varies across the week, since I work at a number of different sites each week. Shortest is 10 mins, longest 40 mins.

I live rurally, the sites are all rural and the drive takes me through some beautiful (officially beautiful: designated as an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty) countryside: woodland, heath, farms and villages. It is enjoyable no matter what the season.

I don’t think that hate anything about it. Getting stuck behind tractors is fairly common and is a bit of a slog sometimes, but it goes with the territory.

Sometimes I will have a podcast on (Philosophise This, In Our Time, Thinking Allowed etc) other times I am happy without.

Obviously it is driving. Usually just me in a car and there are all the pollution issues around that. The nature of the sites means that it is unlikely that there is going to be public transport at anything like the appropriate times anytime in the foreseeable future - there certainly isn’t now. I could, sometimes, cycle to the closest one. But both the public transport and cycling options then make if difficult if and when I am called to one of the other sites during the day - which doesn’t happen every day, but is unpredictable.

xigoi,
@xigoi@lemmy.sdf.org avatar

I go to school from my dormitory by public transport (tram, bus, metro). There are three possible routes that all take 15–30 mins depending on the time of the day with 1–2 transfers, so I have a bit of variation.

plactagonic,

I ride a bike to a next village about 10 min.

Today it was painful, I recently moved here (because of job) and didn’t take all my bike clothes from my parents house jet. So this morning was about 5C and I was in t-shirt and shorts.

Lynxtickler,

Walk from bedroom to office room and turn on my computer. Mostly like full remote, but sometimes miss an office environment honestly.

foggy,

No lights and no traffic, 8 minutes.

Daily average if I show up on time: 25 minutes

Daily average if I show up like 20 mins early: 12 minutes.

The worst part is that I can do 99.9% of my job from home. And if I were needed in a pinch, I could be in in about 15 minutes. But no, HR doesn’t think it’s fair because other people’s jobs require them to be on site.

Well fuck them, we have different jobs. We don’t need to have the same work life. 😡

thelsim,
@thelsim@sh.itjust.works avatar

I’m sorry to hear that, it really does sound awful having to spend time in traffic just to keep up the appearance of “fairness”. I doubt your coworkers would really mind if you asked them personally. And you only add to the traffic and pollution problem with these kinds of practices.
Maybe you could suggest an option of working the first- and last few hours from home and spend 4-6 hours in the office? At least you’d be able to avoid rush hour?

theherk,

A 30 minute walk through a beautiful but extremely rainy European city. When I lived in SF, it involved bike, Onewheel, and / or ferry, and no matter how I went it took about 50 minutes. I love walking in the rain though, so my current commute is my favorite.

theskyisfalling,

Cycling 4.5km averaging 12 mins at 5:00 and around 14 mins at 13:00

Best things about it are I like cycling, it is free exercise and about twice as quick as driving if not more in the afternoon.

Worst things about it are wind and cunts that can’t drive their lumps of metal safely or predictably (particularly taxi drivers, fuck you cunts with razor blades)

Everyone should cycle if they could, it is much better for your physical and mental health and is a good wind down at the end of the day. Just kit yourself out properly for the weather.

ratman150,

Absolutely no traffic + taking toll roads: about 30 minutes.

Normal traffic + avoiding a toll road 50 minutes

Traffic: 1 hr to 1.5 or if it’s really bad you just won’t get home… seriously.

I like the time I have to listen to music or kinda rant to myself, I see a lot of interesting stuff.

I hate my commute, give me work from home I am a fucking IT dude who does everything remotely anyways.

I drive 20-25k miles a year in an ev that can “only” go 80 miles. My daily round trip is 66 miles. (I level 1 charge at work if you’re curious)

It’s wild how many of my coworkers will tell me “just buy a closer house lol” yeah sorry I can barely afford to rent where I live 3 counties away.

Leaving before 6:55-7 will save you as much as 20 minutes. Leaving after 7 people are generally going 5-10mph under the highway limit as I suspect many just woke up lol.

Hobart_the_GoKart,

I’m only in the office once a week. Outside of the winter months, I ride my bike about 4.1 miles (6.6 km). It takes about 25 mins and I cut through a park and church parking lot. I do have to cross one of the busiest roads in my area, with the help of a light. That part is not pleasant. I recently got a phone mount, so now I can listen to the news on my commute as well. The worst part is getting to the office sweaty and having to change into nice office clothes in a bathroom stall. I am the only person who rides to work at my office.

thelsim,
@thelsim@sh.itjust.works avatar

Good on you for taking the bike! :)
Why do you need a phone mount to listen to the news though? Can’t you just keep it in your pocket while cycling?

Hobart_the_GoKart,

Great question! I’m a woman. Generally my riding pants don’t have pockets and when I wear jeans I can’t trust the shallow pockets to keep my phone secure. I don’t normally wear a jacket when riding.

Also, not that you mentioned this but I wanted to bring it up, I don’t like wearing headphones in traffic for safety. I have worn wireless earbuds, but they fell out too many times and I’d have to go back and search for them.

thelsim,
@thelsim@sh.itjust.works avatar

Fair enough. Shame on me for making assumptions based on a username :) I should have included bag as well as pockets.

Anyway, I can understand why you want to use a phone holder if you’re not that keen on earbuds. I don’t like cycling with a full set either, so I either use just one (thankfully mine are quite snug and haven’t fallen out… yet) or I use bone conducting headphones that wrap around my head. They’re not much for listening to music, but great for podcasts and you can still hear what’s going on around you.

otter,

I’m lucky right now because it takes the same amount of time by car as it does by transit. On a good day it might take 20 minutes, on a bad day it could be 30-40. The bad days only happen when there’s terrible weather and the roads are at a standstill

Uranium3006,
Uranium3006 avatar

Fucking hellish. The bus service sucks so much riding bike would be faster. We need bus lanes everywhere yesterday

thelsim,
@thelsim@sh.itjust.works avatar

At risk of asking the obvious question… Why don’t you ride a bike? Are you lacking safe cycling paths?

Uranium3006,
Uranium3006 avatar

My ebike build is still incomplete, also more protected bike lanes would be nice

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