
Perhaps the most important thing that you have to do if you are going to freelance is learn to protect your time. This is important because even if people understand that you are writing, what they really KNOW is that you are home. And? You are essentially doing nothing.
Research? Outlining? Interviewing people? Rough draft? “You know you can do that whenever you want to. You’re just being a brat.”
I kid you not. I have one person in my life who regularly declares me a brat or a bad (fill-in-the-blank although the terms friend/sister will do).
About two weeks ago I got my first writing contract in five months. But I had already agreed to go to the cabin with my husband. He was meeting an electrician so that we could get our power turned back on. Note: I didn’t meet with anyone. I was driving company. While he was with the electrician, I was working. There is wifi at the lodge.
The problem with this is that there are friends who know I was out of town. That must mean that I have free time. In the 2 days we were gone, I got no less than 5 messages about things they want other people to do. “I need someone to X.” “What I’ve realized I really need someone to do is Y once a week.”
Yep.
Back in town, another friend took me aside and we had a little talk. I now have a list of phrases to express horror at all that needs to be done. They include, “wow, that’s awful,” “hey, that sucks,” and “I hope you find someone who will get it all done.”
Today one of my friends looked me in the eye. “When you get one of those questions, nod and then say, ‘wowLet’s be real. They are letting me know because they want me to step up. My daughter-in-law recently lectured me about why her generation doesn’t step up “You might need to ask someone who doesn’t have a job.”
When my son was younger, these kinds of requests came over the phone vs a text. Once my son had friends over gaming. I had a deadline so I told the teens that I had to write and that if anyone called to tell them I was in Australia herding wombats. They were amazingly excited about getting to tell a wide variety of people that they were sorry but I was in Australia. Just talked to me ten minutes earlier? That’s interesting. Still in Australia herding wombats.
Protecting your writing time is critical. Maybe I’ll just tell people that I don’t have time to do whatever it is for them. The wombats need me.
–SueBE









