A Maryland man managed to cut his commute down to zero after secretly moving into his workplace and living there unnoticed for around six months. He told his story on r/malelivingspace and backed up his version of events with multiple photographs taken during his time there. He explained that it all began when his girlfriend of three years left him to be with two other guys in 2025. This plunged him into financial instability, as he was stuck paying for their shared apartment by himself for four months. After that lease ended, he says he was “completely broke, had nowhere to go, and came very close to selling everything I owned.” In desperation, he approached his boss at his warehouse job, who offered to let him stay over at the warehouse rather than become homeless. “I was paranoid that someone would break into my room or steal my things” The initial nights don’t sound like much fun: I was scared by all the random noises our broken ventilation system made, and I was paranoid that someone would break into my room or steal my things. The place was so dusty you could practically taste the wood particles floating through the air. There was a single white ceiling light that flickered constantly, and I didn’t figure out how to turn it off until weeks later. The constant fluorescent buzzing from the office lights drove me crazy to the point where I’d play rain sounds as loudly as I could just to drown it out. Genuinely felt like the backrooms. So, how do you actually live undercover at work? Well, he explained the room they were in wasn’t ever used and was in a secure section accessible only by a keypad, that they did their laundry at a laundromat, and would get up early to shower at a gym, then “arrive” at work on time like anybody else. He also memorized the camera blind spots and generally made himself as inconspicuous as possible. However, he was almost rumbled once: “One of the corporate managers wanted to inspect every room in the warehouse, and luckily I knew ahead of time when he was coming. I hurriedly stacked a mountain of boxes against my door so that if he opened it, all he’d see was cardboard. When he peeked inside, he couldn’t find the light switch, saw nothing but boxes, and decided it wasn’t worth investigating any further. Meanwhile, I was standing silently on the other side of the room, sweating bullets the entire time.” All in all, his description of living long-term in a place not designed to be a home wasn’t ideal. He says it was hot in the summer and freezing in winter, and that the experience left him “deeply depressed”. However, he credits his boss for saving his life by letting him secretly move in, concluding: Don’t be afraid to ask for help. You might be surprised by what people are willing to do to help make sure you get through to the other side okay. Most replies are impressed with the person’s ingenuity and resilience, with a reply saying “Hats off to your boss for helping you when you needed it, and hats to you for making it through this, you were strong-minded despite the turmoils, and you deserve all the good tidings in your future.” Another summarizes the situation as “You homed from work”. In a similar story, a teenager once moved into the AOL headquarters for months before anyone noticed he was a permanent resident. And, in a somewhat more extreme living situation, a Michigan woman lived inside the sign of a Family Fare store for a year before anyone spotted her.