Remote Work
You didn't expect to miss them this much. Some of them, maybe. But the whole ambient reality of having people around — yes, that too.
For most working adults, especially those who work long hours, colleagues are a significant portion of daily social contact. You might not have thought of them as friends exactly — but they were the people who knew the context of your day, who asked how the presentation went, who witnessed the small dramas of your professional life. That's not nothing.
When you work from home, this social layer disappears. What replaces it? Often, nothing — or a thin substitute of Slack messages and weekly calls that preserves the work relationship but strips out the human texture.
Many remote workers report that the loneliness doesn't hit immediately. The first few weeks feel like freedom. Then something slowly shifts. The days start to feel identical. The evenings are harder to enjoy. Weekends begin to carry too much weight, because they're the only social time available.
This trajectory is common enough that it has a name: remote work adjustment period. But knowing it's common doesn't make it easier to experience. The feeling is real, even if it's predictable.
Mindfuse is an anonymous voice call app that connects you with a real stranger. It's not a replacement for colleagues — but it's real human contact that doesn't require a scheduled meeting or a pre-existing relationship. One tap. A person picks up. You talk. First conversation is free. €4/month. iOS and Android.
Anonymous voice. Real person. No shared history required.
One free conversation · €4/month · iOS and Android