Tag Archives: Money

Re: freelance is the new 9 to 5

I read this article yesterday about how traditional jobs are being replaced with contract work (or in my case not even contract, but just writing in exchange for money, like literary prostitution) and it made me think.

I have been uneasy about my employment situation for months. I have been given some amazing opportunities at incredible publications in Chicago. They provide me with the outlets to write about food, drinks and entertainment while exploring the city I love. However, working from coffee shops, or without pants while listening to Bon Iver in my living room, does have it’s downsides. (Note, I am actually listening to Iron & Wine and am also wearing pants). I feel very isolated, which is difficult during this transitional stage in my life when I am away from my friends from college and my childhood friends are all over the country.

I like to break up my days by dragging my butt to the gym, or shopping with money I don’t have, sometime I cook (which also does not involve leaving my apartment), and I go out whenever I can. But at the end of the day, freelancing feels like a constant break, continuous procrastination, and little concrete accomplishments. While my traditionally employed friends may complain about their long days at the office, they get to feel that sense of relief when they make it back to their apartment at 5:30, can kick off their shoes and relax. I am constantly working and not working. I live attached to my computer, plugging sentences into articles, emailing contacts or scheduling tweets. My life lacks balance, consistency and as a result, the satisfaction of putting in a good day’s work.

Freelance may be the new 9 to 5 in difficult economic times, but I worry not only about the economic effects of this trend but also the psychological effects on a society that has a hard time adapting to changes in the norm. Banksy knows what I mean:

I’m living a Chanel life on a Ramen budget


The unhappiest place on Earth

Chicagoans are really good at complaining about three things: the weather, sports and parking. Currently, I have no gripes about the first two, but the third, that one is a doozy.

To make up for the rats in my kitchen and the crime rate, my new neighborhood has the luxury of free street parking, that is, if you can find a spot. By the end of my year living in Rogers Park I’m sure I will have spent several days worth of my life driving around searching for parking. There are a few secrets (the lot at the end of my street that is free overnight, as long as you remember to move your car by 9 a.m. the next morning) and a few pitfalls which I learned the hard way my first few weeks of living in Chicago.

Sheridan road is a wonderful street that practically connects my apartment to my parent’s home in the suburbs. It winds along the lake with views of some of the most expensive real estate on the North Shore. It is a popular speed trap, but if you are smart, it is just a pleasant drive. One night after returning to the suburbs for my kickboxing class, I did the usual dance around the neighborhood in my car looking for that heavenly gift known as a parking space. As usual, it was not going well and every time my heart skipped after catching a glace of room between two cars, my dreams were quickly crushed by a fire hydrant of handicapped signs. Then a miracle! A perfect space on Sheridan just steps away from my apartment. I parked my car and left it there for days, afraid of having to go through the pain of finding a new space.

Continue reading