Safety for Freelancers and Remote Workers Living Alone

No commute, no office, no coworkers to notice if you don't show up. A daily check-in ensures someone always knows you're okay.

Over 36 million Americans work fully remote, and among those who live alone, 55% say they could go 48 hours or more without anyone noticing their absence. The elimination of a daily commute removes one of the last passive safety signals.

The Challenge

Working from home alone means no commute, no office, and no coworkers who would notice if you didn't show up -- you could be incapacitated for days before anyone realizes

The blurring of work and home life creates routines so private that even friends and family may not know your daily schedule well enough to detect a problem

Social isolation from remote work can lead to depression and withdrawal, which further reduces the likelihood of anyone checking on you regularly

How I'm Alive Helps

A daily check-in replaces the passive safety signal that a commute and office presence used to provide -- someone will know within hours if you don't respond

The check-in fits naturally into a work-from-home routine, becoming as automatic as opening your laptop in the morning

Your emergency contact provides a human backup to the digital isolation of remote work, ensuring you're never truly alone even when you work solo

The Invisible Safety Risk of Working From Home Alone

Remote work has given millions of people freedom from the commute, the open office, and the rigid 9-to-5. But it has also quietly eliminated one of the most basic safety mechanisms in modern life: the daily proof of life that showing up to a workplace provides. When you worked in an office, your absence was noticed by 9:15 AM. Someone would call, then text, then escalate. If you didn't show up for two days, someone would come to your door. That entire system vanishes when you work from home. Clients might not notice a missed email for days. Freelance clients might assume you're working on another project. Your calendar is private, your routine is unknown, and your physical presence is confirmed by no one. I'm Alive recreates this basic safety signal. One check-in per day confirms you're active and well. If you miss it, someone who cares is alerted. For the millions of people who work from home alone, this is the safety net that replaced the one the office used to provide.

Building Healthy Routines That Include Safety

The best remote work advice always includes building routines: a consistent start time, regular breaks, a dedicated workspace. Safety should be part of that routine, but it almost never is. Adding a daily I'm Alive check-in to your work-from-home routine takes five seconds and provides 24 hours of coverage. Set it for when you start your workday -- it becomes the first thing you do alongside making coffee and opening your laptop. Or set it for end of day, confirming you made it through another day safely. Many freelancers and remote workers find that the check-in also serves as a gentle accountability tool for their overall wellbeing. On days when depression or isolation tempts you to stay in bed and withdraw, the check-in is a tiny commitment to showing up for yourself. And if you can't make that commitment, someone will reach out -- which might be exactly what you need.

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Frequently Asked Questions

I work irregular hours as a freelancer. Can the check-in accommodate that?

Yes. Set your check-in window for whenever is most consistent in your schedule. Even if your work hours vary wildly, there's usually a point in the day -- morning or night -- that stays relatively stable.

I'm on video calls all day. People see me. Isn't that enough?

Video calls confirm you're present during work hours but provide no coverage during evenings, weekends, or if you cancel calls without explanation. The daily check-in covers all hours, not just work hours.

I sometimes work from coffee shops or coworking spaces. Do I still need this?

Those environments provide some passive safety during work hours, but they don't cover you at home in the evenings or on days you work from your apartment. The check-in is for your overall daily safety.

I live alone and sometimes go days without talking to anyone. Is that dangerous?

It's not inherently dangerous, but it means a longer gap before anyone would notice a problem. A daily check-in ensures that gap never exceeds your check-in window, even during your most isolated weeks.

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