I am in my 11th year as a fulltime freelancer. It is nice ride, interestingly I haven't had problem with things all wannabe freelancers expecting: all of my invoices get paid (with 99,9% of them on time), I was always able to cover my monthly costs with money coming from last month billing and I always found good clients.
During last decade I was able to do all the stereotypical things people imagine to do when they don't have to go to the office: waking late, spending year wasting time in SE Asia, traveling around the world, working from coffee shops, coworking places and even in my bed, I also started a startup (or five), had numerous side projects and whatnot.
So far so good, that digital nomad-remote freelancing thingy actually exists and it is actually quite easy to get into this lifestyle. The dark side of freelancing is that you usually get into quite boring and not that interesting kind of work: writing CRUD apps, maintaining old software and basically doing stuff that don't require a tons of deep expertise and continuous effort of highly skilled team of people.
For some people it doesn't matter, but if you ever want to work on some high tech stuff be worry, it is very hard to get back into game after years of freelancing, you might be destined to sling some basic apps for the rest of your life (which is actually what majority of devs do in their jobs anyway).
I've had a very similar experience. While I do agree that you end up with a lot of boring work, it really isn't tough to keep skills sharp either. It's probably worth setting time a specific amount of time for this very purpose. Establishing a 20% time concept is much easier when you are in control of your own hours.
I've found that as a freelancer while I haven't been working on cutting edge tech as much my social, project management, and business skills have all improved by leaps and bounds. This may be even more important than being familiar with the cutting edge js frameworks or slinging around some deep neural network models.
Well it depends on what you consider being interesting: finding work that let you use latest javascript framework or architecting micro services? Easy. Finding work that will let you spend years and years perfecting the way how to make query engine of specialised embedded database run faster? (my old job) Less likely.
It depends on your ambitions, lot of people would be happy to work on regular apps for rest of their professional life, some not. People just have to think about it as coming back into that "hardcore" sector is not easy after years of writing crud apps.
>“I just want to read about things that interest me, have conversations, use it all to inform my understanding of the world, and share what I’ve learned.”
yep, this sums up my wants as well. the thing is, people don't pay for that unless you're already established or the thing you want to learn and talk about is hot. and hot things cool, so you'll need to find new interests that people find hot to learn about. etc.
but there's a huge upshot to self employment as i see it that the author didn't mention: you don't have to hide.
you don't have to hide your time from your bosses.
you don't have to hide your interviewing with other places.
you don't have to hide your sense of humor to avoid offending coworkers.
you don't have to hide your wisdom or knowledge for fear of messing up the office political situation.
you don't have to hide your true values anymore; you don't have to pretend to care about the company.
sure, you lose some stability, but who cares. stability is too often another word for stagnation.
I discovered the same concept when being self-driven for an extended period. I would sum it up as saying freelance allowed me to be "my most authentic self" and it was phenomenal.
There's something about employment - sometimes it's the employers, sometimes the culture, mostly ourselves - that leads to a certain form of inauthenticity. Maybe this is what's know as "professionalism"?
However, I did find after this realization that I was able to shape my next career choices around maintaining that authenticity with a high level of success (albeit, not perfectly).
Yeah. "I'm hoping you will give me more money for less work/irritation than other options I have, and/or will let me gain experience to land a job somewhere else that asks even less of me while paying me even more money" doesn't go over well, but everyone involved knows that's the honest answer for 9/10 or more of applicants, unless you're one of the rare employers doing something actually interesting or fulfilling on a macro level.
The degree of dishonesty surrounding all business and employment, even in the best cases, makes me really uncomfortable, being so totally at odds with the way I was raised. Some of it's so pervasive that people don't seem to notice until you point it out, then usually try to come up with excuses for it. Coming to terms with all the lying has taken years, and I still don't like it.
It makes me feel nauseous just thinking about it, just the fakeness of it all. And we have to do it to survive. Holden Caulfield irritation of "phoneys" comes to mind.
Interview idea: Honestly and bluntly tell the potential employee the worst things about working for your company, _then_ ask them why they want to work there. I bet you would get some really telling information out of their answer, and if you haven't scared them off maybe they'll be more likely to stick around.
>There are employers that give the best of both worlds.
sure, i believe it. i may have even worked for one at some point.
but (straying from the original discussion substantially) that just trips other red flags for me, like selling your labor for a pittance while the company gets a disproportionate share of the value from your time spent with them.
Not many, I spent a long period freelancing on short jobs, more than 250 customers and I could count on one hand the number I would want to work for full time.
Interesting read but the title is unnecessarily clickbaity since the conclusion is, "If you are looking for security or reassurance, I do not recommend this line of work" - which everybody knew already. In fact, contrary to the title, he does recommend it so long as you aren't looking for security and reassurance.
I enjoyed the post, but think I would've gotten more out of it if the title was more congruent with the content. I was expecting a lament or postmortem (which hooked me in), but the story was more like an exultation. Congrats on your success, I hope your upcoming book will help more people fruitfully pursue their dreams.
Glad to hear you enjoyed it. I guess I figured admitting I was scared on a regular basis, and wondering whether doing this might kill me would be considered somewhat a lament.
But of course I think I'm doing the right thing – after all, I've put everything I have into it. If I felt like I had a choice, I'd probably do something differently.
I've never understood the irrational desire to quit your job.
Jobs are wonderful, magical things and I've been thankful to have every single one of them, even the ones that sucked, like that time I worked 12 hour shifts in a warehouse doing product assembly. Or when I had to deal with father as an electrical apprentice. Or when I was on the shit list in the military.
I guess it's because every job I've had, I've subjected to an intense inquiry on exactly what I'm getting out of the job. I'm very intentional about my work. For the warehouse job, I was saving up for a move. I knew exactly what I was doing and why.
When I see people with these crazy flights of fancy throwing away perfectly good opportunities to work and build incrementally to their dream lives, it makes me a little sad.
The very irrationality of his thought processes caused him to utterly fail to learn how to market his services, making him piss away a decade of what could have been fortunate prosperity.
Sure, he never starved. There was always some money coming in the pike. But he purposefully did not shoot for any more.
It's almost like these people hate money for some reason. He finally comes to his big life realization and then sees his path.
And when I read his big life realization, I was immensely struck by the fact that I want exactly what he wants. A nice, comfy lifestyle where I can have conversations, share what I know, and learn.
My job is the perfect tool to allow me to do that. I get all my money from one place. And I can have conversations, share what I know, and learn at work.
> I've never understood the irrational desire to quit your job.
instead of
> I've never understood the desire to quit your job.
It sounds like you think it's irrational by definition. If you start out already thinking that, of course you won't understand it.
I think it's easily explained by the fact that people have very different emotional responses to "going in to an office every week day for the rest of your life and doing what someone asks of you".
I, for one, dread that, and as soon as I had saved up enough in my first tech job to quit, I quit, to travel and often to do nothing, and I love that. When my bank account gets low I'll get another job for a while.
Others want (in a way that ought to be described as 'need') to be in control of their own fortunes, or to be doing a mixture of things that keep life interesting, or to be doing something that constantly subjects them to new experiences and new people, or to not know what next month holds. So they live their life in a way that gets them toward that.
Others don't know what they want, just that they don't want this, so they're trying other things and experimenting.
Anyway, I don't think you want what he wants. This is nothing like what you wrote:
> But take it from me, a ten-year veteran self-employed creator: If you are looking for security or reassurance, I do not recommend this line of work. However, if you are burning with curiosity — if your heart and intuition lead you to do things that don’t make sense—well, then you don’t really have a choice in the matter, do you?
The desire is irrational because it doesn't respond to reason. If you try to drill down to real specifics with these people, then eventually you have to give up because there aren't any. They're fixated on not having anything that looks or feels like a job. They can't be convinced that less drastic measures are necessary. They won't engage with their problems logically.
You mention control, they want control of their fortunes. That might be true if not for the fact that they don't actually want to learn anything 'salesy'.
Their decision-making process is completely oriented around not having a job, not around making money. Because if they really wanted to make money under their own steam, then that would be their goal, and the intermediate steps would reflect that.
The closest I can get to these people's underlying thought mechanics is that they just don't want to subordinate any time at all to anyone else. They want complete 100% control over all of their time. Which would be really nice, but c'mon now.
If you try to drill down to real specifics with these people, then eventually you have to give up because there aren't any. They're fixated on not having anything that looks or feels like a job. They can't be convinced that less drastic measures are necessary. They won't engage with their problems logically.
Hmm. I'm not going to say you're overgeneralizing, because you probably do have observational data behind your summation above. But even if it applies to the majority of "escapists" -- there's a significant percentage out there who not only do have plan; they make up for a good chunk of the truly brilliant and creative people who do anything truly interesting, at all.
The closest I can get to these people's underlying thought mechanics is that they just don't want to subordinate any time at all to anyone else. They want complete 100% control over all of their time. Which would be really nice, but c'mon now.
OK, now we're getting somewhere. But is it really that outlandish? There's this category of people known as "small business owners", you know - who basically fit that description. In fact, if you look around, there's quite a lot of them out there. In addition to, you know, genuinely creative people -- successful film makers, musicians and the like.
Are you saying they all should've just thrown in the towel, gotten a teaching job or something because... there's just no "there" in these pursuits they were almost blindingly attracted to?
If you think Richard Branson ever worked even 40 hours a week in his life the way an employee does, you'd be surprised.
He had a hippy indy prog record company that got lucky with an unexpected hit record. The rest is investing, self-marketing, and networking, hard work (a la Jobs or Carmcak or Gates etc.) was seldom required.
Not sure your point is coming across. Okay, he's no Jobs or Gates, that's for sure.
But something tells me probably does something besides sit around and sip Daiquiris (or read HN) all day. "Networking", if you want to call it that. Or "investing" in ways that don't actually lose money takes actual work, you know.
The point is that, while it's not like he toils away in a coal mine -- and we know he ain't no brain surgeon -- whatever it is that Branson actually does, by any common sense definition it qualifies as "work".
> They want complete 100% control over all of their time. Which would be really nice, but c'mon now.
I think you may be under-valuing how much some people like to be in control of what they put their time towards. These are the people who hate taking a class because its a requirement for a degree, or doing an entry level job that they have no interest in simply to pay the bills.
Work is a large part of life. But not working for someone isn't about 'controlling your fortune' so much as it is controlling what you get to put your effort towards for a large portion of your life. Having to work for someone else will lead to less freedom of choice than working for yourself. Or at least, that's the eventual goal.
> Having to work for someone else will lead to less freedom of choice than working for yourself.
That's just silly. If you really wanted to get away from all human dependence, the path to that is clear, go live out in the woods off the grid. Build your own shelter. 100% of your time will go towards the things you want to do.
You don't even have to go that far, you can pick and choose your amount of engagement. I met a guy at the bar who was visiting from, was it South Dakota? Way out there. Had like 8 different little business-y things he did to make a living. Only reason he came down here was to visit his mom.
Whatever it is you want, holding down a stable, reliable job is a great way to move closer to it.
People with irrational mindsets will never agree to a rational course of action. It's all gotta happen right now.
>That's just silly. If you really wanted to get away from all human dependence, the path to that is clear, go live out in the woods off the grid.
For all your talk of irrationality, this is the classic slippery slope fallacy.
As if the only two options are dependence on salaried work as an employee and escape away from civilization.
Listening to you one would think that wanting to be an entrepreneur or a freelancer is something exotic, for really crazy daredevils. Something only terminally hippies would ever attempt. When it's not just extremely common, but it's just as valid way of working as any other.
Maybe the military is not the best place to learn everything there is about employment and the motivations of people, or about what's "rational"?
No, it's you committing the slippery slope fallacy. You introduced the idea of being independent. I offered one extreme solution and one not so extreme solution and indicated how you could pick and choose just how dramatic you want to go.
You are the one who is saying I gave a either-or.
> Listening to you one would think that wanting to be an entrepreneur or a freelancer is something exotic, for really crazy daredevils.
I said nothing of the sort! I know lots of successful entrepreneurs. That's a great path to take if you want to do it. But you get there by learning about entrepreneurship and marketing, not by wishing and wishing you can quit your job.
> Maybe the military is not the best place to learn everything there is about employment and the motivations of people, or about what's "rational"?
>You are the one who is saying I gave a either-or.
That's not the case (plus I'm not the parent who you were responding to).
The parent wrote: "Having to work for someone else will lead to less freedom of choice than working for yourself."
And you responded: "That's just silly. If you really wanted to get away from all human dependence, the path to that is clear, go live out in the woods off the grid."
That's the dictionary definition of the slippery slope fallacy.
The parent didn't say anything about "really [wanting] to get away from all human dependence", so why bring this up? He just said that working for yourself is more free than working for someone else.
And you continued that "Whatever it is you want, holding down a stable, reliable job is a great way to move closer to it" freelancing or creating one's own business is not an option, and everybody is better of to achieve their goals by "holding down a stable, reliable job".
Tens of millions of people started straight into either freelancing or getting their own business while young or even straight out of college. An office or salaried job has never been a requirement, and has become even less so nowadays.
>I said nothing of the sort! I know lots of successful entrepreneurs. That's a great path to take if you want to do it. But you get there by learning about entrepreneurship and marketing, not by wishing and wishing you can quit your job.
Who said about "wishing you can quit your job"? TFA and other people in these comments spoke about actually quitting your job. Or not starting with one in the first place, but doing your own thing from the start. Heck, the article is about the guy completing 10 years doing his thing, not about them "wishing they can quit their job".
Maybe I'm more off-the-handle here than I care to admit. I don't know why I still get constantly surprised by the crazy idealism of HN. I'm a 100% dyed in the wool hacker, coded BASIC in grade school, but there are aspects about the culture that still elude me, mostly because I have a lot of other identities and can't constantly keep tabs on what this particular community feels.
So yeah, I'll concede the logical points you raised.
But you have no idea how many really and truly irrational people I've run into in my day. Life wasn't kind to them, and I'm expected to fix it, and if I don't, I'm the irrational / disloyal one. I am very very attuned to the irrational mindset.
But HN has its crazy idealism, so the second I call one person irrational, everybody here jumps on me like I'm a crazy job Nazi. I attacked your idealism, I must pay. I get this crap with my roommate, who pissed away 3 jobs since I've known him and have to give a break on the rent because he's satisfying other obligations that he took on at least partly due to idealism.
So let me state, for the record, that not wanting to have a 9-5 job is an eminently rational thing to want. Wanting it against reality, however, or without a realistic plan to accomplish it, or settling on stupid ways of getting there, like just quitting without a game plan, is a recipe for pain, not prosperity. You're not dealing from a rational frame, so your outcomes will not be what you want them to be.
My strong reaction comes from many many years of dealing with people who beg for your help, but just can't be helped. You can't talk sense into them, you can't give them anything that would meaningfully help them.
People who beg for help, but are beyond help, are one thing. Yes, that's annoying, but you are projecting an awful lot that's not actually in this article. Your reaction to a blog article about some guy finding his own way is out of proportion to what was actually stated. I would humbly suggest that there is something deeper being triggered in your psyche that you would gain more by exploring than trying to convince everyone else how irrational this approach is.
I felt sure that I’d never work for someone else again. My will to “work” was gone. I cashed out a big chunk of my retirement fund to buy myself some time. After all, I had spent years eating 80-cent Banquet® meals for lunch, saving for this moment.
From your comment above, one of many here:
So let me state, for the record, that not wanting to have a 9-5 job is an eminently rational thing to want. Wanting it against reality, however, or without a realistic plan to accomplish it, or settling on stupid ways of getting there, like just quitting without a game plan, is a recipe for pain, not prosperity. You're not dealing from a rational frame, so your outcomes will not be what you want them to be.
The article also indicates he has savings, something lots of Americans don't have, regardless of how they make their money. He has more than paid back the money he cashed out of his retirement.
I don't know what on earth you are arguing against here, but it seems unrelated to the actual article under discussion. I get that people get defensive when "everyone" seems to argue against them. Been there, done that, got the t-shirt. But sometimes, walking away from the stupid argument with internet strangers and not continuing to dig your grave deeper is the better choice. Sometimes, one is just running a fever or pissed at their boss or whatever and this stupid argument seems wildly more important than it really is. Down that path lies madness.
>So let me state, for the record, that not wanting to have a 9-5 job is an eminently rational thing to want. Wanting it against reality, however, or without a realistic plan to accomplish it, or settling on stupid ways of getting there, like just quitting without a game plan, is a recipe for pain, not prosperity. You're not dealing from a rational frame, so your outcomes will not be what you want them to be.
Well, we can agree to that, but that's not the exclusive or general case.
I think you color it more by your experience with your roommate, than by what people generally do.
In general, judging from hundreds of millions of McJobs and corporate jobs, most people don't leave their jobs willy nilly.
I'd go as far as to say that wanting to quit your job and start a freelancing or entrepreneurial or small business gig, is not irrational in itself, EVEN if the person fails. If it was guaranteed success, we wouldn't be talking about entrepreneurial risk.
As long as its a calculated risk -- and not crazy optimism, I don't find it irrational.
Now, crazy optimism, "I will succeed no matter what", that is irrational.
You're taking my argument to a ridiculous extreme, nowhere did I extend it to ridding self of human dependence. It looks like you are simply content to keep pushing an ideology instead of replying to what's being said.
I dunno. I jumped from school to the military, then out of the military into the workforce. I've had spiritual adventures and travel adventures.
I am somebody who knows what I want and why I want it. And I've found that the best path to getting those things is usually the one you're already on, you just have to make slight course corrections.
But why do you find it so hard to empathize with people who look at their lives in a different way? What's with going around calling people irrational instead of just different than you?
>The desire is irrational because it doesn't respond to reason.
Whereas the desire to go be somebody's helper for 8 (or more) hours every day, be on their command, and work on implementing their dreams and plans, stands to reason?
>Their decision-making process is completely oriented around not having a job, not around making money.
You seem to be convinced that the pinnacle of reason is making money.
The reasons aren't that difficult. They are usually autonomy, creativity and dictating your own pace. I didn't mention less/more stress or less/more money but they are somewhere there too.
These can be huge reasons for folks wanting to pursue their own path. Depends on the personality.
(I'm an American, working in the United States. My perspective is that one alone.)
I've never understood the irrational desire have a job.
My contract work over the last 13 years has been immensely rewarding, both financially and personally. I've met and worked alongside many very interesting people. I've had some great relationships and untold wonderful conversations (and billed for them). There have been contracts that are grueling and difficult and some that have been embarrassingly easy. I have always been thankful that diversity in my income has allowed me to ride-out economic hardships and to be selective about the work I do and how I spend my time.
When I see people chain themselves to a single source of income (and particularly a single source of health insurance) I get a little sad. I see people frustrated with dealing with HR policies, working unpaid overtime, and forced to deal with unpleasant co-workers. So many people seem to be slaves to their jobs but are either unwilling or unable to make a change. The fear of losing a job today and being without health insurance has turned work into near-slavery for many people. I've heard many stories of hardship that start with "I lost my job..."
Working intentionally and working a job/freelance are orthogonal. I work very intentionally, but I don't have a job. I watch my billable number every day, and I tune my work up/down based on my personal commitments and goals.
Any perceived "security" in a job (for the vast majority of jobs) where you hold no equity is an illusion. (Sure, sure-- different states have different protections for employees, unions have contracts, etc...) I feel very comfortable that, so long as I don't do anything to tarnish my reputation in the public sphere I have pretty good security in my income.
It's almost like these people hate money for some reason.
No - they just hate wasting time. Like time spent living someone else's dreams, for example.
And I can have conversations, share what I know, and learn at work.
That's great for you. Not all jobs work out like that for everyone, unfortunately. In fact they're nearly 100% "dead time" for many people I know. An acceptable enough tradeoff (given the available choices), mind you -- I'm not saying these people are complaining. But in and of itself -- 8-12 a day (depending on your commute) gone straight down the toilet, nonetheless.
So like the author of the original post himself acknowledges -- the grass certainly ain't always greener, on "the other side". But I don't poo-poo these people for trying. In fact I'd wager it'd be a much more boring world to live in if people didn't try to "break loose", as often as they do.
>When I see people with these crazy flights of fancy throwing away perfectly good opportunities to work and build incrementally to their dream lives, it makes me a little sad.
If everybody thought like that there wouldn't be jobs in the first place, as nobody would risk to start a business (and hire people).
Not to mention that freelancers are becoming a dominant percentage of the workforce.
Besides, the story is about a person who didn't like his job, and built a decent (if not great) career for himself by himself after he quit. Not sure what's "irrational" about it.
>Sure, he never starved. There was always some money coming in the pike. But he purposefully did not shoot for any more.
Shoot for more of what? More of the same job he hated, with perhaps better compensation but the same lack of satisfaction?
And why should have he "shot for more"? Shouldn't he just shoot for enough? (and he seems content with what he has)
In fact, why don't you "shot for more" and do something on your own? Why is your idea of more constrained to being a salaried employee?
So... having owned a company before, and somewhat understanding your rationale but not really sure how to explain the other side to you...
Have you ever thought that perhaps a life doesn't need to have this work/life separation at all? When you run/own your own company your life becomes work and vice versa. It's incredibly freeing. You wake up when there is work to do, and any time you are working on something when you don't want to be - you know the direct and logical reason you are doing so. Want a vacation tomorrow? Take it. You can push a couple meetings and take those other conference calls from the beach no problem. You are never sitting there plugging away at pointless work no one will ever see - and if you are, the second you realize it you can simply stop and switch to a different direction.
Ever been in the office at 3pm wondering why the hell you have to sit there staring blankly at a screen? As a business owner that never happens. Not being productive at that moment? Just leave and go swimming. No boss to justify it to, and no reason to feel guilty about what your co-workers may think.
It's freedom. Sure if I could somehow work a job I hate for 10 years and then have financial freedom so I could do whatever with my day - great. Sign me up. That doesn't really exist (for me) though - so the next best thing I can do is make my career my life and hopefully reach the same financial goals in 40 years instead of 30, but having come out ahead since I didn't hate most of my waking life working on some useless thing I don't have any investment in.
I've done the commute to work 10+ hours a day thing, and I honestly don't know how anyone can act like such a mindless drone for so much of their useful life. Seems incredibly myopic to me.
There are jobs you could not pay me $50k/hr to do. Life is too short to spend time doing stupid busy work - no matter how well paid it is.
Or put in a much more simple way? It's about enjoying the journey, not just the destination. When the journey equals the vast majority of the waking hours you exist for, I think it's incredibly important that part of your life gives you direct satisfaction over simple monetary concerns. Once my basic needs are met - compensation is certainly nowhere near the top of my list when evaluating job opportunities.
The problem with most jobs (well, at least the kind of jobs those who frequent this site typically get) is not that they are bad. In fact most of them are quite comfy and well-paying. By the standards of previous epochs they would qualify as leisure.
The problem is that a job robs you of that tiny bit of fuel that you can use to change the world in the direction that is yours alone. I don't know the exact word for it, so let's call it agency. I would argue that it is in large part what makes you human and not an automaton. You didn't have that problem when you worked that warehouse job because you used it to save up for doing something you wanted. But for some senior engineer at the BigCo polishing the internals of an ad-serving backend in exchange for a hefty paycheck the problem is real.
It is especially tantalizing for us software developers because we are constantly bombarded with reminders about how much leverage and power we have. This makes the pain of wasting our agency on someone else's crappy vision even more acute.
> When I see people with these crazy flights of fancy throwing away perfectly good opportunities to work and build incrementally to their dream lives, it makes me a little sad.
I think you're making an assumption here that your "dream life" is a destination. Which is a perfectly rational way of thinking.
But, alternatively, your dream life could instead be the journey. So, perhaps, rather than working at a job today to make your dreams come true later, maybe your dream instead is to do what you love today, and let the future take care of itself.
Not saying either is right or wrong - I know many people in each camp. Just saying there's two ways of thinking about it.
> I've never understood the irrational desire to quit your job.
When you don't have a job, you have a lot of time to live how you want.
Last time I quit I spent two years driving from Alaska to Argentina through 16 countires, and right now I'm spending two years driving right around Africa through 30 countries
I hike, swim, camp, cook, learn languages, talk to locals, see sunrises, sunsets, beaches, mountains, rivers, lakes, oceans, volcanoes, animals, take photos and generally do whatever I want on any given day.
> A nice, comfy lifestyle where I can have conversations, share what I know, and learn.
Yes, and you, unlike the author of this piece, appear to grasp the basic fact that nobody will pay you for this. So you have to make a living some other way, and use the leisure you earn to do this nice thing that you want to do.
Aren't there a whole range of media jobs that do just this, from blogger, to journalists, youtube hosts, or documentary makers, etc. It may be very difficult/risky to get to an independent financially sustaining position doing this, but it's not an impossible aspiration. I do think the author is downplaying the difficulty to even himself though.
The problem with all media jobs like this is that you are beholden to the media. You aren't self-employed in the sense the author of the piece is using that term; you don't have sole control over what you say, what you investigate, etc.
Even if you're self employed, you're beholden to your customers. With Patreon, you're beholden to your collective patrons. But maybe that was your original point that I misunderstood.
Still, I'd say in many of those jobs you have the self-determination to choose any topic. You just can't guarantee that there won't be any blowback of you pick some topic of controversy.
> maybe that was your original point that I misunderstood.
Sort of. If you're a journalist working for a media company, from the viewpoint of the media company, the value you're producing isn't your content, except indirectly. The direct value you produce is in attracting eyeballs, and hence ad revenue. So if your goal is to produce value with your content and get paid for that, you're not going to achieve that goal working for a media company, except as a lucky side effect.
If you're self-employed and being supported by your readers (say, by Patreon contributions), then you are producing value with your content, directly. That was my understanding of the goal of the author of the article.
> I'd say in many of those jobs you have the self-determination to choose any topic. You just can't guarantee that there won't be any blowback of you pick some topic of controversy.
You can't guarantee no blowback if you pick a controversial topic no matter how you are getting paid. The difference is in how that plays out. If you work for a media company, your future depends on the people running the media company and whether they will support you. If you work for yourself, your future depends on your readers and whether they will support you.
First of all, jobs are irrational. Wanting to quit one is wanting to be freed from the shackles of wage slavery.
Second, the fact that you justified what you were doing for yourself doesn't make you right. It means you convinced yourself you were right. Being "intentional" about your job is irrelevant to whether it is a good idea or not.
Third, a lot of people don't want to buy into a system which, if they follow its procedures and restrictions exactly, might allow them their dream life (it often does not). A lot of people would rather live right now the way they choose to, because they prefer the experience of living on their own terms instead of simply dreaming of a similar life in the future.
He has health problems. That is the same reason I do freelance work.
Additionally, the economy is seeing a general uptick in gig work and a general downtick in full time employee positions. I have run into a number of people online who have been job hunting for a year or more, to no avail. I tell them all the same thing: You may not be able to find a job, but that doesn't mean you cannot have an earned income. Go looking for gig work while you keep job hunting.
While I would dearly love to be you, my health makes that impossible. Modern medicine has created a lot of people who lived that would have died a hundred years earlier, but they may never be genuinely hale and hardy. They limp along as best they can.
I do not qualify for disability, but a regular job is a problem for me. Gig work has been a better answer, though I kind of hate it because I value security and social status. So I would much rather have a job and a brag worthy title. That simply was not working for me. I was running up crazy levels of debt when I had a corporate job, in part because that lifestyle just does not work for me. I have been paying down debt while making a lot less money doing freelance work.
Good for you. You go. But you are very fortunate. Not everyone can pull that off, even if they desperately want to.
If you learn a lucrative enough skill, and the basics of negotiation, then you can find a corporate job that can fit your needs. I have a friend with narcolepsy, he worked ten years at a company that let him come in whenever he wanted to, usually around 3 or 4 in the afternoon.
What I would do in your position would be to be very clear in a job interview what health conditions you have that must be accommodated for. Once you start the job, find a routine that works. And then don't let anyone pressure you into deviating from your routine. They need to accommodate you, not the other way around.
Eventually it'll get fixed into the company firmament and you'll have your security.
I wasn't asking for advice. And you are ignoring large parts of my point, such as the fact that there are fewer full time jobs and more gig work. Some people simply will have no real choice here, your insistence to the contrary not withstanding.
But that wasn't the case for the author. He was happy to have gotten fired. He thanked his manager for letting him go. Having another job, ever, was completely off the table, not an option.
This is not a rational mindset. Yours might be, you don't seem to want to share your thought process and I'm sure you have your reasons for that.
>But that wasn't the case for the author. He was happy to have gotten fired. He thanked his manager for letting him go. This is not a rational mindset.
Says who? Are you some arbiter of rationality?
What logical argument supports that going freelance and not wanting to be a salaried employer is not a "rational mindset"?
Just because he does not articulate that "I have health problems, thus a normal job does not work for me" does not mean that isn't baked into his choices. He was apparently relieved when he was fired because the job wasn't really working for him.
The lack of that observation may mean he isn't the most stellar author ever. Or it may mean he is not some font of wisdom and his explanations are sort of half-baked. But none of that is evidence that his choices were irrational.
It doesn't have to be the same choice you would make for it to be rational.
And I don't owe you justification for my life choices. It is obnoxious to imply that I do.
I haven't dismissed nor attacked your life choices. I have merely pointed out the obvious-on-the-face-of-it fact that your life is different from his and this creates different decision trees and different outcomes. That's it.
Hi, I'm the author. Thanks for reading and commenting. To clear it all up, yes, I had health problems even at the time, and still do.
I didn't realize how much the condition was affecting me until several years after I started on my own. Now I know that it caused me to make more emotional decisions, to have a short fuse, and to tire easily. It still does.
As I reflect on it, I try not to make that too much of a factor. It's one of those mysterious impossible-to-indentify conditions. I still marvel that a person can go to an office every day, work around all of those people, and not need to take a nap in the middle of the day. In the rare days that I really feel good, suddenly "normal" people make sense. But that quickly slips away.
I don't want to make that a part of my rationalization of my decisions, though it likely played a large part. Anyway, I think I explained the rationale behind my irrationality in my post so I'll let that do the rest.
> If you learn a lucrative enough skill, and the basics of negotiation, then you can find a corporate job that can fit your needs. I have a friend with narcolepsy, he worked ten years at a company that let him come in whenever he wanted to, usually around 3 or 4 in the afternoon.
How? Not a rhetorical question; most people, even with a lucrative skill and the basics of negotiation, don't manage that. How did your friend pull it off?
It's not that hard, if you have a lucrative skill. You get an understanding manager, explain the situation, and ask for the accommodation. If you don't get it, change jobs.
If you have a lucrative skill, then you can keep doing changing jobs until you have one you like. If you don't have a lucrative skill, your first priority should be getting one. These days you can swipe a credit card to go to code school. Or just save up. Code school grads still get snapped up as soon as they graduate.
Not everybody likes to code, but hey, it's better than not having a job.
>It's not that hard, if you have a lucrative skill.
If you have a lucrative skill you'd be an idiot to go work for someone else. You can have your own business and have clients coming to YOU, and get to keep all the profit, and grow the business too.
So, somehow your definition of lucrative skill is "lucrative, but only if you're a salaried employee".
Meh. I'd either have to do all the business crap, which I have no interest in doing, or I'd have to pay someone to do it, which would get rid of those profits.
For me, it was the realization that I had been doing the same thing over and over for several years, had no prospects for change, got no special respect for my skills and experience, and was being paid much less than the incompetents wise code I was being asked to fix. Share what I know? Learn at work? Nope.
Sure, all of the above is my fault. But once you've dug the hole, it's hard to get out.
I like working. When a job makes it hard for me to do the work I'm good at, all of the joy gets sucked out of my day, and life becomes about hating work and recovering from work. For example, being hired as a Sr. Front-end Developer and then being tasked with manually cleaning up an unending amount of mangled HTML would suck big time.
His thesis statement is entirely misleading. He absolutely recommends it. The entire article reiterates several times how happy he was and continues to be that he passed up more secure opportunities again and again over the years.
I expected it to be about how you regret your choice and you would recommend this path to almost no one. This seemed to be what other readers expected too. But, instead, you talked about how happy you were with the choice. Also, you hedged your anti-recommendation quite a bit:
> "If you are looking for security or reassurance, I do not recommend this line of work."
I don't think people proudly believe they want "reassurance", in many cases.
> "However, if you are burning with curiosity — if your heart and intuition lead you to do things that don’t make sense—well, then you don’t really have a choice in the matter, do you?"
I think people would much rather think of themselves as "burning with curiosity".
(Isn't curiosity cooler than reassurance/security? At least in the HN audience?)
I interpreted your closing statements, very roughly, as ~"Careful, don't do what I did if you're normal. Only do what I did if you're cool." So it was actually a recommendation, in my mind.
Ah, thanks for the explanation. I found the "clickbait" bit to be a leap (though you weren't the only person to say so). This is how I really feel about it. I wish I felt like I had enough of a choice in the matter to say "oh well, that was a mistake." If I felt like I did have a choice, no, I wouldn't recommend it.
My main issue with freelancing is the quality of the most of the gigs. Sure, you can land a gig which would allow you to use your most favorite trendy JS framework, but in the end you’d likely end up building some variation of a CRUD app. It’s extremely hard to land a project which would allow you to work in cutting-edge technological problems.
An issue which I commonly see in these threads is the black-and-white antogonization of “working for the man” and being a “free man”. It’s almost like you are either a mindless 9-to-5 drone or you “escaped the system”, and working for yourself, even though you might be scraping bahts eating ramen in Chiang Mai.
I share this sentiment as well - when I work for a bank, at least I get a sense that I'm working towards something meaningful (matching investors with opportunities). On the other hand, working on another video game or novel that no one wants or needs sounds depressing.
This sentiment may be unpopular here, but I think it is probably difficult to pull this off and have a family simultaneously. Having the luxury of following your interests comes from someone putting a roof over your head and food on your plate during your formative years. Quite likely, your parents made it possible (through their sacrifice) for you to receive an education and give you access to the social network that put you where you are today. If you do follow your dreams while having children, I hope you are able to provide them with a foundation for their future success.
I have to say I'm a bit surprised he moved to Colombia. My aunt lived through her teenage years in Colombia, and even though she has family there she absolutely refuses to go visit because of how horrible it was.
I'm sure it's changed since she lived there, but it's not like she's been isolated from the country's happenings the last 30-some years. (I mean, she has family and friends she can call or message.)
The healthcare situation in the US is horrible enough for this. Mind, I'm from Brazil and even though we're a shitty third world piece of crap sometimes, we still got free universal health care and great 100% free public universities. It baffles me that a country as wealthy as the US does not provide such basic things to its citizens. I guess it's a matter of the mindset on priorities? War > Health? I went to Cuba once, where people are objectively very poor, and still I had no issues being seen by a doctor at a local clinic for free when I had an eye emergency even though I was just a tourist. I live in Europe now, where general quality of life is much better than where I lived in Brazil and it terrifies me that other Brazilians often look to the US as something to strive for rather than Europe in our next developments. I've heard of multiple cases before of people with bad health who simply had to flee the US and move somewhere else more social so they wouldn't die or because they had already gone bankrupt paying for health services. It's a shame, really, the US definitely has enough money and would be able to provide their citizens more humane care, but this is not an unsurprising story. :(
I've been creating content for a few years, but I've been self employed for a really long time.
The author's comments on Louis CK was very relatable. I've had the same exact thought processes and conclusions.
I haven't hit that point where things start to grow exponentially but I really feel like that's how it goes. Unfortunately it's ultra dangerous in the tech field because creating a course on XYZ will be outdated by the time you "make it" (and to create content like that might be 3-4 months of ~80 hour weeks).
My plan is to keep creating content until something sticks.
I'm sure it's easier for me to find a part-time job than living from my art/curiosity. Better 1/2 the week lost to work, than all the art lost to comercial compromises with little pay.
I will do full time for a year or so to get some credability and save some money. I'm just not sure yet how to find an ok 2-day job that pays ok. Maybe consulting would be worth an attempt, but I guess I'd need to network a lot for that.
During last decade I was able to do all the stereotypical things people imagine to do when they don't have to go to the office: waking late, spending year wasting time in SE Asia, traveling around the world, working from coffee shops, coworking places and even in my bed, I also started a startup (or five), had numerous side projects and whatnot.
So far so good, that digital nomad-remote freelancing thingy actually exists and it is actually quite easy to get into this lifestyle. The dark side of freelancing is that you usually get into quite boring and not that interesting kind of work: writing CRUD apps, maintaining old software and basically doing stuff that don't require a tons of deep expertise and continuous effort of highly skilled team of people.
For some people it doesn't matter, but if you ever want to work on some high tech stuff be worry, it is very hard to get back into game after years of freelancing, you might be destined to sling some basic apps for the rest of your life (which is actually what majority of devs do in their jobs anyway).