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Freelance Writing: Do What You Love — and Pay the Bills

  
  
  
  
  

By Rebecca Smith Hurd

Q. How do I balance making money with fulfilling my passion as a writer?

Ask Writing  Coach logoA. “Balance” can be defined and achieved in so many ways that if you ask three veteran freelance writers this question, you’ll get three different answers. What works well for one scribe may fail miserably for another, because their talents, goals, interests, circumstances and financial needs vary. Some freelancers rely on non-writing jobs or supplementary income to help meet their bottom lines, while others earn a living exclusively as writers.

The beauty of freelancing is that you can choose to do whatever best suits you, your life and your business at any given time. The only universal truth seems to be that writers who are passionate about their work make putting words to the page a priority. After all, you can’t make money writing if you don’t write!

Writer #1: Passion Pays

Patrick Di Justo is a full-time writer whose work appears in Wired, Scientific American, and The New York Times. Prior to his freelance career, Di Justo programmed robots for the federal government and ran a planetarium in suburban New York. He says he “literally can’t remember” the last time he took a job he hated just for money.

“I am the luckiest writer on the planet, because I spend all my time writing articles I love,” says Di Justo, whose book The Science of Battlestar Galactica is due out in October from Wiley.

Di Justo, who last summer celebrated his 10-year anniversary of “Working With No Pants,” says that over the past decade he has occasionally done other paid work. This includes teaching science classes for the American Museum of Natural History and occasionally fixing computers for his neighbors. But the lion’s share of his income comes from writing.

“I have always lived a very simple lifestyle—I don’t feel the need to take extravagant vacations, or to have the latest cars and gadgets, or even to try every new restaurant,” he says. “Because of that, I can have a very enjoyable life on the money I make from writing.”

Writer #2: Stories on the Side

In contrast to Di Justo, children’s book author Chris Barton says he spends most of his working hours not writing. The Austin, Texas-based scribe, who supports a family of four, fits in bursts of creativity whenever he can.

“I’ve got a full-time office job, so that relegates my weekday writing time to an early-morning window (usually between 5 and 6:30 a.m.) and my lunch hours,” says Barton, a business analyst at Hoover’s. “I get in some additional hours on the weekends, mainly before my children wake up, and if I’m on deadline I can often summon the energy for a little more writing after my kids are in bed.”

All of those piecemeal hours can add up to some good work, says Barton, whose Shark vs. Train is on the New York Times best-seller list. “For me, the biggest benefit of the office job has been allowing my writing career to flourish without the pressure of having to provide for the mortgage and our health-care premiums.”

Barton also does paid visits to schools, which is not only financially rewarding but “a whole lot of fun.” Just as with his office job, though, there’s a trade-off: Time spent soliciting visits, preparing presentations, traveling to and from schools, and visiting the schools is time spent not writing, he says. It’s also time away from his office job, which means using his vacation time or making up the hours on other days.

Writer #3: Labor of Love

Meanwhile, Sue Fagalde Lick says she’s having difficulty balancing making money with writing, in part because she’s caring for a spouse with Alzheimer’s. “I don’t mind if you mention my situation,” she says. “In fact, it is totally relevant, in that freelancers have no safety net when it comes to major family events such as illness or death. Such things make it hard to work, and there’s no paid time off.”

Lick, a former newspaper reporter and editor, is currently focused on writing her fifth book—and relies on other income to make ends meet. “Right now, my ‘day job’ is as a music director at our church. It’s hard work and definitely takes time from my writing, but it also gets me out of my office and around people and feeds my passion for music,” says Lick, who’s based in South Beach, Ore. “I also do some editing and teaching, and I have passive income from selling the books I have already published. If I didn’t have a portion of my husband’s pension to live on, I would have to get a full-time job.”

Lick doesn’t yet have a publisher, but she’s passionate about the topic and is confident that her efforts will pay off. “[The book] addresses the lives of women like me who do not have children because their mates were unwilling or unable to have children with them,” she explains. “If it doesn’t sell, I will definitely self-publish it because I know there’s a market out there: I get lots of hits at my website and my Childless by Marriage blog.”

Balancing making money and art is always a challenge, she adds. “Do you focus on the things that pay at the expense of those projects about which you feel passionate, or do you risk investing all your energy in something that might or might not pay off. I spent many years writing articles about whatever I could sell, but I have reached an age where I feel I can’t [spend] any more time on writing that doesn’t have long-term value. Life is too short.”

Do you have a question about freelancing? Ask Writing Coach.

Comments

To me, the right balance is earning enough doing something that I love. I maintain a travel blog ion the side while having a day job as a business journalist. it can be tough balancing my time, but i don't mind. My true passion is travel journalism and if I need to keep my job as a business journalist just to pay the bills in the meantime is fine with me. I don't want to get pressured accepting jobs that I don't like (like PR which I really hate, with all due trespects to great publicists out there) just to sustain my travels and my writing.
Posted @ Thursday, July 22, 2010 1:38 AM by Prime
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