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Unfortunately, many
of you reading this article, like me, are tied to a desk; a shop; maybe a
burger stand. We all have our stories of why we must go to work and why we
are unable to pursue our dreams and become self-employed. For some of you,
it might be thousands of dollars in credit card debt. For others, it
might be College debt; the education you had to have has landed you forty
thousand in the hole and working two jobs to pay all the bills. You know
you want more out of this life; you know you want to be free from the job
trap - free from punching a clock and free to work in the yard when you
want to. Free to get out of bed when you want to, free to take home all
of the profits for yourself and not make someone else rich. For many this
dream seems to be just that; a dream. The truth is, however, if you want
to be self-employed, you can obtain it! It may be hard work; it may take
a few years and sticking to a well thought-out plan, but it can be
obtained.
As I
write this article, I am about half way there myself. I have always wanted
to be a freelance writer; a full-time writer to me is the cat’s meow.
Everyone around me has told me over and over that I could not make a
decent living being a writer. However, upon doing some research, I have
discovered that I can earn my keep doing something I enjoy, and that other
people are doing it aas well.
From what I can see,
there are two types of writers out there; the ones who are writing
machines and therefore make a lot of money and those who play a lot, write
a little, and scrape by. I want to be somewhere in the middle. For many
people, the biggest problem is finding the time to achieve their goals
when they have to work full-time.
I say, don’t quit
your job to chase your dreams. Instead, work a few hours each evening on
your goals. I write every evening for a few hours, publishing as many
articles as I physically can. I am by no means getting rich, but the fact
is I am almost ready to jump ship and quit my day job.
I am not
making what I currently make at my day job by writing at night, but I am
planning ahead so I will not need a lot of money to live comfortably once
I leave my job. Being self-employed and happy does not require a lot of
money. If you are reading this, chances are you are someone who thinks a
little differently about life and also enjoys the thought of
self-sufficiency, so you are one step ahead of most people. To be
self-employed, you need time and a willingness to go without for now for a
big payoff later. In order to be self-employed and chase your dreams, you
need to eliminate as much of your debt as possible and be as creative as
possible at doing so.
Here is
an example of someone who is self-employed and loving it. AT the same
time, he lives like a king on a small amount of money. Thomas J. Elpel
from Montana runs a green publishing business, a store, and a business
where he brings people into the wilderness and teaches them how to live
off the land. Sounds pretty cool, doesn’t it? Is Thomas rich so he can
live the life of leisure or is he a famous author making millions from his
books? The answer is neither. He lives cheap.
Over a decade ago,
Thomas had a dream of never having a “real job” as many of us put it. In
fact, Thomas wasn’t even out of high school when he decided to build a
house debt-free. Not just any house either; one made of log and stone.
Thomas married his high school sweetie and they began to build their dream
home. It took a number of years to complete the house, but when they were
done they were debt free. In the years leading up to the completion of
their house, Thomas and his wife had an average combined income of ten to
twelve thousand dollars! How did they do it you ask? Besides living in a
tent and eating beans for a few years, they got as much of the material
from the land they bought as well as from any dumpster they could find.
Because they built the house themselves and got the majority of their
materials for free or almost free, they built their beautiful home for
about twenty thousand dollars. To look at it online, you would think it
cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. My point here is because they were
able to build debt-free, they have very little money going out each
month. Therefore, they need very little coming in and it doesn’t take
much for them to continue their self employment. On their website, Thomas
mentions that in 1999 they made around twelve thousand dollars and they
felt rich. Why? They can spend as much time as they want to outside in the
woods with their kids floating on a river whenever they want to. Now that
is freedom! Thomas and his wife had a plan. They stuck to it and now reap
the benefits from it. If you go to his website,
http://www.hollowtop.com/, you
will see the books he has for sale to help people out by detailing many
success stories of people who escaped the job trap by living simply and
eliminating their debt.
I am in
the process of building a log home and I am trying to do it debt-free. It
will probably take me the next three or four years to complete the home,
but when I am done, it should be paid for. By that time, I will be
writing full time. If you are interested in building a home debt-free to
help you escape the job trap, go to Thomas’s website and find out how it
can be done. My log builder also preaches debt-free building and helps
people set up a five-year plan to achieve that goal. Again he preaches
that you need time; not lots of money to achieve your dreams and be
successful.
As I am
finishing this article, I am getting ready to eat my peanut butter
sandwich. I eat one everyday for lunch. I have figured out that they cost
less then a $.25 a piece. I get sick of them about every other week, but
when that happens I think about my log home on ten acres, my chickens
crowing in the background and getting up everyday to write about the
outdoors. When I do that, I slap a little more peanut butter on the bread
and dig in. Being self-employed doesn’t take lots of money; it takes a
plan and a person who is diligent to follow through. Sit down and make a
plan. Decide how much you really need to live on. Focus on paying off
your bills and chasing your dreams. What it boils down to is this: how
much are your dreams worth? How much is that farm on a hill worth? How
much is it worth to tell your boss “I quit”? After answering those
questions, decide if you have what it takes to live on a shoestring for
awhile to achieve your goals.
There
are many days that I get frustrated and don’t think my dream of being a
full-time writer will ever come true. When that happens, I call other
writers. I get online and read Thomas Elpel’s website and learn about
other people who have succeeded. It is possible and when you think it is
not, find someone you can trust that will inspire you to keep on keeping
on… You owe it to yourself to be self-employed. Go out and get it. I am
currently writing every single night until midnight. There are days when
it gets old, but it will be worth it in the end. It is worth it for
anyone reading this to develop a plan and go follow your heart. If you
don’t think you can, go to the Thomas Elpel’s website. You will go away
convinced you can achieve self-employment. The feeling of knowing it is
just around the river bend makes me work twice as hard. |
Hollowtop.com

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