An interesting post by an agent tailor-made to burst my little soap bubble dreams.
I dream of the quit-the-day-job deal. I am also a tad security-conscious. I once took one of those on-the-job personality tests--the results were a tie between "entrepreneur" and "security", which is about as conflicted a result as you can get.
To be a full-time writer. The books need to keep selling, and you need to keep writing them. For 20, 30, 40 years or more.
I dream of the quit-the-day-job deal. I am also a tad security-conscious. I once took one of those on-the-job personality tests--the results were a tie between "entrepreneur" and "security", which is about as conflicted a result as you can get.
To be a full-time writer. The books need to keep selling, and you need to keep writing them. For 20, 30, 40 years or more.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 05:50 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 05:55 am (UTC)I've been hanging on by my fingernails for 20 years, and did really well in the Nineties, but I've had to pursue alternative sources of income in the past few months. Frankly I don't see this getting better for anybody unless or until there is a completely new distribution model. The one we have are broke and it are broke bad.
Definitely keep the day job.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 06:26 am (UTC)House, dogs, family stuff, and writing add up to about a job and a half. Throw in the actual full-time job, and I'm dealing with 10 lbs of Life in a 5 lb bag.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 06:33 am (UTC)I know that mmpbs have taken the hit for years because of consolidation of distribution and the huge changes in sales outlets, but are trades and hcs affected as well?
Are you thinking electronic distribution or growth of small press or moving away from paper novels into other types of storytelling, or what? If distribution is improved, will more people read the books? Or have we maxed out the book-reading public? Do we need to develop other ways to tell stories to attract non-readers?
no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 10:09 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 01:58 pm (UTC)I do have a specific savings goal in mind, and hopefully in the next five years I'll be able to take that step. Assuming the stock market doesn't completely tank and I stay in good health.
But I don't ever see myself quitting work entirely.
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Date: 2006-02-09 03:50 pm (UTC)Yes, I know, I'm not figuring in taxes or health insurance. Well, yes I am, but in a roundabout way. I have a Roth IRA set up that I hope to use for health care premiums/fund an HSA/whatever. Taxes will get paid. Barring a complete collapse of the financial markets, I shouldn't, hear me God, risk my house or wind up under a bridge. All those entertaining adult thoughts.
I'm hoping I can swing this in the next 2.5 years. It may be later. Just watching the numbers.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 03:56 pm (UTC)The prospect of going freelance would terrify me. But I don't work well unless things are settled, and things don't get much more unsettled as they do when you're freelance.
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Date: 2006-02-09 03:57 pm (UTC)I dropped out of the super-high-paying, 60+-hour a week job about ten years ago; I left being a lawyer to become a librarian. At the time, my salary was halved (although my hourly wage didn't take anywhere near the same hit!)
I enjoy being a librarian, but I tire of the time commitment. I'm ready to scale back again, but I'm afraid to do it. My husband and I discuss this a lot - he is much more willing to trust the accoutants' graphs than I am. (According to those graphs, we can be out in 9 years, with plenty to last us in our current lifestyle. I don't believe them - maybe because it seems to good to be true.)
I really don't like being a grownup sometimes.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 04:03 pm (UTC)I'm prepared for my standard of living to take a hit. I am figuring that the freedom will be worth it. I may kick myself later, but I won't know until I know.
I really don't like being a grownup sometimes.
Testify, sister! I may swipe this as a Thought for the Day.
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Date: 2006-02-09 05:39 pm (UTC)I dream of freelancing for a living, but I don't ever want to depend on making money with fiction. Editing and journalism to other people's specifications, no problem. Stories on demand? Nuh-uh. Fortunately I'm a good editor and journalist as well as a fictionaut. I think I've got a shot at making it all work, but it's going to be tricky.
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Date: 2006-02-09 07:17 pm (UTC)I admire anyone with the courage to just hold their nose and jump into the deep end of the pool. But I agree on not wanting to depend on fiction-writing income. The front lines of the entertainment wars--not a stable place to be.
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Date: 2006-02-09 07:37 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-09 08:57 pm (UTC)I'm prepared for *some* hit. (We eat out at restaurants a lot, for example, because we're both too beat to cook and clean up when we get home. I love cooking at home and wouldn't mind doing it, in a world where there's more time.)
That's the balancing act, though, isn't it? figuring out the things that we're willing to sacrifice, and the things that we aren't?
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Date: 2006-02-09 10:22 pm (UTC)As the day draws closer, I think I'll finally be able to shake out once and for all what I'm willing to do without. I only hope that I don't jump before I'm really ready, and end up regretting it.
Then there are days when I think I'd be willing to live on peanut butter if I could just step away. It isn't even that my job is 60+ hours a week stressful. It's just that I'm going through the motions.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-10 05:15 am (UTC)Then I found out I had a serious medical condition, and boy, it's nice to have kept my insurance despite its cost. Of course, the IT industry crashed around all this, plus 9/11. So although I wasn't making a lot, I was doing better than tech friends who were laid off.
Moral? Plan. And then plan some more. And expect to live simply unless you're really lucky.
Still hoping for a bestseller, of course...
no subject
Date: 2006-02-10 02:16 pm (UTC)Access to reasonably priced group health insurance is the biggest sticking point for me as well. I know too many writers who have made the leap to full-time status, only to find themselves in a financial crisis when they had health issues.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-10 03:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-02-10 06:21 pm (UTC)I know NINC had looked into trying to get group health insurance to offer to their members, but the problem is that it's not a huge buying pool, and the demographics of the group aren't attractive to insurers (who want the majority of policy holders to be relatively young and healthy).
Last time I checked, depending on where you lived, one of the cheaper options for getting group health rates was to see if there were plans available to members of your local chamber of commerce, or through professional associations.
The Authors Guild also offers health plans, but I seem to recall that they've had problems keeping an insurance carrier, and in getting coverage outside major metropolitan areas.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-13 09:26 pm (UTC)Honestly, I'd advise people not to do it without insurance. And it's hard to get that through to the very young and healthy. We all think we're immortal at that age. We don't know, until a friend is stricken, about MS, chronic fatigue, etc. And don't realize it often hits in the late 20s.
no subject
Date: 2006-02-13 09:42 pm (UTC)I really do think there's a genetic pop on some of us that is always skeptical. It goes along with vivid imagination and the ability to speak eloquently. I think we may be an early warning system for our tribe, so to speak.
Since they don't want our advice, we're trying to look after ourselves. Down here, we watched the people burned by Enron. We don't believe in pensions, unless they are something simple like "Can buy health insurance at current cost to employees" or some such.
No--being the adult is vastly over-rated...