From interns to CEOs, supercommuting has lengthy been a strategy to make work match life. However one millennial nurse is pushing the development to the intense.
Courtney El Refai might name Sweden house, however each six weeks the 32-year-old commutes some 5,300 miles away to work at a San Francisco hospital as a neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) nurse.
Whereas some might name it loopy, El Refai mentioned it’s all price it for her dream job. Making over $100 an hour on a per diem schedule, she solely has to work 4, eight-hour shifts each 4 weeks. By stacking these shifts—working on the finish of 1 schedule and the start of the following—she will be able to knock out her hours in just some days, spending about 10 days in California earlier than heading house.
“The commute is completely outrageous, however think about having six weeks off after working 10 days on a repeated sample,” she mentioned in a TikTok video that’s racked up over 500,000 views.
As a result of the price of dwelling is decrease in Sweden than the Bay Space, she mentioned her paychecks cowl her payments—plus the $450 roundtrip aircraft journey to and from work, she advised Enterprise Insider. Furthermore, since her husband and daughter made the transfer to Europe in December, she says she’s been having fun with an enhanced work-life steadiness.
“It principally appears like I’m a stay-at-home mother, however I’m nonetheless a working mother…” El Refai mentioned. “That’s one thing no 9-to-5 job will ever give me.”
RTO and ‘job-hugging’ might gas an increase in supercommuting
Supercommuters—usually described as individuals who journey greater than 90 minutes for work—aren’t new. However as employees weigh stability, household, and value of dwelling towards the each day grind, the phenomenon is simply rising.
Through the pandemic, many individuals moved to cheaper, extra spacious areas. Nevertheless, with return-to-office mandates in full swing, some are unwilling—or unable to uproot their households once more. As an alternative, they’ve accepted lengthy commutes by prepare, aircraft, or automotive. Analysis from British prepare journey firm Trainline discovered that the variety of folks within the U.Okay. spending greater than three hours commuting doubled since earlier than the pandemic.
In the meantime, a tighter job market has made employees extra cautious about quitting—what some name “job hugging.” That reluctance to alter roles may preserve folks tethered to a faraway workplace, even when it means grueling journey.
For El Refai, the trade-off is price it. And judging by the traction her movies are getting, she doesn’t consider she’s alone: “I feel that there are much more folks doing it than the typical individual realizes.”
Fortune reached out to El Refai for additional remark.