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Forum:
Visual FoxPro
Category:
Other
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
00148900
Message ID:
00149603
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35
>>That's true. But what do you do if you're in the middle of a project and a previous client needs something? There are bound to be times when you're not available.
>
>You've got to be able to step in, if it's necessary, I think. Not that you can give that previous client a week, but you've still got to be available for bug fixes and other support. And that's not possible if you're trekkiing through Nepal for four months. :)

Don't you know my code doesn't have bugs? :) (It has gremlins)

Even if I took four months off at once, I don't like traveling by myself, and my husband surely wouldn't take that much off work. So, I'd be home if I was needed. What I like is the idea that I could take the summer off and not be actively working on a project that takes fulltime attention.

>Also, contracting depends heavily on word-of-mouth. If you let things die down for too long, that fizzles out.


That's true.


>>That's one big downside to all this. I'm not so sure I have the energy to put in the 12-14 hour days I hear consultants putting in. But, then, I'm not in it for the big bucks. If I keep to small projects and don't take on too much it should be ok.
>
>That's the way I prefer. You're there, you're available, but you can limit your projects so that you can work as many or as few hours in the week as you want (as long as the bills get paid). At Sierra, it's common to _require_ 16 hour days, six day weeks for months on end. I'll never do that again!


I'm glad my dream of working at Sierra never came true. Not that I had a chance or anything... I like my 8 hour days. Which is why part of me is looking at me very strangely for agreeing to take on some part-time work. But it'll be doing something different, so it's not like being at work longer.


>>I probably would have [turned down a job when your plate is full].
>
>It's hard to say until you've been in a situation of being (fairly) desperate for work at one time. The people who went through the Great Depression became _very_ hard workers. :)


I used to go on and off welfare between part time jobs during the recession. I know what it's like. But now I'm married and my husband makes enough to live on, so I won't be in danger of starving.


>>Or maybe they'll find a cure for fibromyalgia in the next 5 years and I'll have energy to spare. :)
>
>I hope they do, Michelle.

Me, too.

-Michelle
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