@Lapys Depends on the amount of spare time and complexity of personal code project.
Also, it kind of 'never finishes' ... I mean, you also need to maintain those projects if you intend them to be useable. Which means that you need to spend time on them every now and then.
Speaking of which, it's about the time I am doing some annual app maintenance :D
I have this time slot at the moment - rental properties need minimum attention in the next 3-4 months. A.I. Robotics group is slowly walking up from the lockdown and need minimum attention. Solar electricity generation project is not happening until COVID19 aftermath clears up. Doing some improvement on the rural land .. slowly (completing 1 week's work in 3-5 months). My micro app company's paper work (for last year) is all done. So there are 2 things outstanding - app maintenance comes first.
I wonder if you can achieve maximum freedom without being a loner. If you are not loner, then you will socialise with others. Since everyone inevitably have different interests, tastes and values, when you spend considerable time with others, you need to 1) compromise or 2) manipulate for others to comply to you.
Compromise usually means that you don't have the freedom to choose what appears to be the optimum choice for you. Manipulation is no way to achieve sincere long term friendship/relationship.
Of course being a loner does not guarantee you to great freedom, because you also need true abilities so that you don't rely on others. It's incredibly hard to have the ability to survive on your own. I have never come to anyone who has such an ability.
I have great respect to those who can indeed survive on their own.
@TelKitty As I understand things, the Mormon view of Christianity is that we're all capable of becoming basically Gods--i.e., that when somebody goes to heaven, they don't just go there to be near a divine being, but that they actually become divine themselves. And yes, that we're all actual sons (and daughters) of God, so people who've gone to heaven are actual family members (and yes, "God" was a son of some other God, etc.)
@TelKitty Not my interpretation at all--the Mormon interpretation (or my understanding of it, anyway). As for no friends or colleagues, I guess it depends on your view. The usual view is that all people on earth are related if you go back far enough, and (presumably) the same would be true of these divine beings. The idea that some would be so distantly related that the family relationship would be irrelevant doesn't strike me as a whole lot more far-fetched than the rest of it.
As for my personal beliefs...I consider religion to be one of the few communicable forms of insanity.