Surviving the School Holidays as a Freelancer

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My 4am desk, as far away from sleeping children as possible and very close to the kettle.

This is not a post about how wonderful being a freelancer is and how it solves all childcare issues during the school holidays. It is a survival guide.

I’ve been a freelance copywriter for nine years now and absolutely love my work, I really do. I enjoy the freedom to pick and choose the clients I work with, to choose my hours, where I work, how I dress when I work (sometimes in jeans, sometimes in fluffy slipper boots) and what projects I take on.

I’m also incredibly grateful for the flexibility being a freelancer offers. I never miss sports day, I can reshuffle work pretty effectively to cover the inevitable sick days (school children do like to share bugs), am there for assemblies and can help on school trips. I walk the kids to school and I’m always there to pick them up and to take them to swimming and so on.

It sounds idyllic and in many ways it is. It was most definitely the best choice for me and our family although there are downsides with being self-employed, as there is with everything. For me, the biggest downside is managing the school holidays without childcare.

Top Tips for Surviving the School Holidays

Be Realistic

The chances of you being able to continue to work full-time office hours with children at home is unlikely, and why would you want to? At the end of the day, the summer is also a chance to spend some quality time together. Be realistic about your expectations for getting work done. Keep on top of your regular clients / work but perhaps weigh up the pros and cons of taking on extra work or new projects during the summer (new clients often need additional hand-holding and admin time that you just won’t have).

Decide When You’ll Work

While it isn’t easy to have a solid schedule during the holidays you do need to choose pockets of time that you will be best able to work effectively. Many freelancers “parent “during the day and work during the evening. I’m no good at evening work anymore, my brain shuts down after 7pm and so I start at 4am and write solidly until 8.30am-ish (longer sometimes), after which the boys are up and ready for breakfast. At this point I’m Mum for the day, only jumping back on the laptop to do emails or social media bits and pieces while they’re busy playing. Some days I switch off at 9am, having done five good hours of work and am finished.

A 4am start does not work for everyone but it does for me; it’s my most productive time and allows me to get the work done.

Say NO!

For such a small word it can be blistering hard to get out sometimes. I’ve had to really be firm this year and say no to additional work and short deadlines. Thankfully I’ve been doing what I do for long enough to persuade clients to wait or extend deadlines because as I’ve told them, I simply don’t have time to give their extra work / new work the attention it deserves. Being honest about not having time means I have three new clients waiting for me in September. They appreciated my honesty and were willing to wait.

Invest in Yourself

No matter how content your children are to occupy themselves or how well you work at odd hours of the day or night, working from home during the holidays takes its toll. You need to make sure that you take time out to relax and recover before you get to that point where you can’t think clearly anymore.

One day, when Roy was off work I slept in then grabbed the laptop to go to the library and work in new surroundings, without interruptions during “proper” working hours. Believe it or not, this was quite the tonic! If I work weekends it is the odd hour here and there, not big pieces of work and I’m allowing myself to wake naturally rather than by a shrill, annoying, very early alarm.

The whole point of my juggling work and home like this is for the kids to have the very best summer and for me to be part of it, and enjoy it. I can’t do that if I’m frazzled. I make taking time out for me a priority.

Can it Be Done?

Is it possible to effective juggle working from home and children over the summer without childcare? It is, as long as you are realistic about the time you have to work, are organised and make sure you look after yourself.

This summer has been hard work in some ways as this is the first time I’ve chosen to do the whole summer without any childcare whatsoever however, I’m very glad I have. We’re having great fun, making memories and while I’ve got close to a deadline or two I’ve had all work done on time, without anything being rushed.

I’m taking a few days off in September when they’ve gone back to school, just for me because you know what? I think by then I’ll have more than earned it!

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Slimming Down and Hitting the Sales

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I’m back at Weight Watchers….

Yes, I know, you’ve heard it all before (although to be fair it is usually Slimming World), however this time I mean business and it certainly seems to be paying off. WW have a new Smartpoints plan which works brilliantly for me and so I’m hopeful I’ll see some significant weight losses over the next six months.

The problem with slimming down is the fact that you can’t take your clothes with you. I’ve already lost a few pounds and if I lose too many more my jeans will let me down and I’ll be shamed on the school run for flashing my M&S belly-grabber knickers.

In the past, I’ve refused to buy new clothes when losing weight because of course I knew I’d be (hopefully) shrinking out of them. I’ve made do with what I’ve got (despite it looking too baggy) or hit the charity shop for some “in-between” basics. This time around I’m doing things differently. I’m not waiting until I hit goal before buying new clothes, I want to enjoy clothes and feel good about myself now!

This is of course where the Yorkshire/Irish mix in me (frugal leaning towards being tight when it comes to spending on myself) is in conflict with my “I want to look nice and have nice things” self. The answer…. Sale shopping!

One thing I do not do, or do as rarely as possible is go physically clothes shopping. I hate it! The queue for the changing room, the VERY unflattering lighting and huge mirrors coupled with that unique changing room smell makes it a nightmare for me, and one to be avoided at all cost.

This time around I’ll be hitting the online Vivienne Westwood sale instead of the charity shops or even the online Joules sale (if I’m feeling brave enough!). I’m making another new clothing change too, this time around I’m not going to keep my “big” clothes. They encourage me to slip into them when I gain a few pounds rather than keep slimming to stay in the new size (slimmers will understand what I mean!) so they have to go!

I’m quite looking forward to this next leg in the Grand Nicki Weight-Loss Journey, including (for the first time) designer clothes shopping online.

To keep me going (I’m determined!) share with me your top Weight Watchers or slimming down hints, tips and tricks!