DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
No Result
View All Result
DNYUZ
Home News

I struggled to make it to the office due to day care drop-off, so my boss lets me work from home. I sometimes feel guilty about it.

December 26, 2025
in News
I struggled to make it to the office due to day care drop-off, so my boss lets me work from home. I sometimes feel guilty about it.
Georg Loewen
Georg Loewen Georg Loewen
  • Georg Loewen struggled to get to the office on time due to his daughter’s day care drop-off.
  • His manager approved a more flexible schedule than the company’s policy typically allowed.
  • Loewen shared the challenges of his commute — and how others might secure similar flexibility.

This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Georg Loewen, a 35-year-old senior director of digital marketing at SourceCode Communications, a public relations agency. He lives in West Orange, New Jersey. Business Insider has verified Loewen’s employment with documentation. The following has been edited for length and clarity.

When I joined my current employer in November 2024, I made it clear that my first job was being a dad. My wife and I both work, and our daughter was barely a year old.

I’d always been fortunate to work for flexible employers, but like many new parents, I was still figuring out what fatherhood meant — and how it collided with the reality of work.

Since 2022, my company has had a three-day-a-week office policy for employees based in New York and New Jersey. My one-hour door-to-door commute to our Manhattan office proved challenging over time.

Missing the train would delay my arrival at the office

I handle day care drop-off most mornings, which is at 8 a.m. The timing makes it hard for me to catch the ideal 8:20 a.m. train, which gets me to the office just after 9 a.m. — when everything runs on time. The day care is 4.5 miles away from the train station, where parking is first-come, first-served, and finding a spot can sometimes turn into its own adventure.

Taking the train at 8:46 a.m. gets me into the office after 10 a.m., but I sometimes would miss that one, too. When I did catch it, I often had to jump on client calls during the commute, which wasn’t ideal, since the service wasn’t always reliable and I had to change trains in Newark.

At some point, figuring out the best approach each day — balancing my availability and time in the office — started to feel like a math equation.

Business Insider has spoken with dozens of workers about how they’ve responded to corporate strategy shifts, layoffs, and return-to-office mandates. If you have a story to share, contact this reporter via email at [email protected] or via Signal at jzinkula.29.

Use a personal email address, a nonwork WiFi network, and a nonwork device; here’s our guide to sharing information securely. Read more on the topic:

  • A former Microsoft worker has been job-hunting for 9 months. He says it feels like companies are ‘looking for Superman.’
  • These workers aren’t waiting to be laid off — they’re building a Plan B
  • Fears of a return-to-office mandate prompted a millennial to secretly get a second remote job

A conversation with my manager led to work-from-home flexibility

Early this year, my daughter was going through a rough patch at day care. My manager noticed that I was struggling to make it into the office consistently and proactively brought it up.

Initially, we had a discussion about reducing my in-office time and maybe setting up a hot desk, but we quickly agreed to keep things flexible for the time being; if day care drop-off ran long or parking didn’t work out, I’d just work from home.

It seemed like what mattered wasn’t where I logged in from, but that the work got done.

Following this conversation, I began working from the office between zero and two days a week.

I sometimes feel guilty about the flexibility I’ve been provided

When I first started commuting less frequently to the office, I felt a bit guilty — partly because I worried this was supposed to be non-negotiable. Even now, I sometimes catch myself overthinking how it might be perceived by others, or worrying about being seen as “the one who gets to work from home more.”

But the truth is, I’ve only ever felt supported. There’s an understanding within the company that family comes first, and I genuinely believe my colleagues see that. There’s no bad blood — just trust.

For me, that trust has allowed me to drop my daughter off at day care, commute to the office when I can, and still make it home for dinner with my wife and daughter — if New Jersey Transit cooperates.

Not every day is perfect, but more often than not, it works.

I suppose you could call the flexibility I’ve been provided an exception or an accommodation, but to me, it feels more like an understanding. I’m confident that my company would extend the same trust and flexibility to anyone else in my shoes.

I know my flexibility might not last forever

Currently, with the flexible commuting arrangement, I usually make it to the office one to two days a week, but on weeks with holidays or parent-teacher conferences, I tend to go in closer to once.

Finding a parking spot at the train station continues to be challenging, so I recently got a foldable bike. My new commuting routine involves dropping off my daughter, driving back home, and then biking 1.5 miles to the station as quickly as I can. I’m still on the permit-parking waitlist for the station, but my neighbor told me not to get my hopes up too high.

While I’ve been grateful for the flexibility my company has provided, I know it might not last forever as my team continues to grow. I recently hired a marketing coordinator, and I’ve tried to be in the office whenever possible, especially during the onboarding phase. There’s never been a hard deadline on how long this flexibility would last, but I expect it will be reassessed over time.

For me, one of the biggest takeaways from this experience is that if you’re transparent about your needs, it’s possible to be awarded flexibility, and those conversations aren’t as stressful as they may seem initially.

Read the original article on Business Insider

The post I struggled to make it to the office due to day care drop-off, so my boss lets me work from home. I sometimes feel guilty about it. appeared first on Business Insider.

Lara Trump Murders the Dance Floor in Cringe Video
News

Lara Trump Murders the Dance Floor in Cringe Video

by The Daily Beast
January 18, 2026

It’s murder on the dance floor as Lara Trump steals the moves from Egyptian rapper Mohamed Ramadan. A viral video, ...

Read more
News

Matt Damon says Netflix wants to make action movies differently to account for shorter attention spans

January 18, 2026
News

‘Sign of advanced dementia’: Trump stuns observers with confusing fundraising message

January 18, 2026
News

Brain-infecting ‘raccoon roundworm’ parasite found in dog in San Fernando Valley

January 18, 2026
News

These Are the 12 States Vying to Kick Off Democrats’ 2028 Contest

January 18, 2026
Michael Goodwin: Trump spared the ayatollah for now— but his options in Iran are still wide open

Michael Goodwin: Trump spared the ayatollah for now— but his options in Iran are still wide open

January 18, 2026
FBI asks agents to voluntarily travel to Minneapolis

FBI asks agents to voluntarily travel to Minneapolis

January 18, 2026
Strategas chief Jason Trennert’s cancer battle made him appreciate the little things: ‘Privilege to be alive’

Strategas chief Jason Trennert’s cancer battle made him appreciate the little things: ‘Privilege to be alive’

January 18, 2026

DNYUZ © 2025

No Result
View All Result

DNYUZ © 2025