If you want to eat, you've got to earn a bob
Dear internet, talk to me about jobs.
Please note that this post is not a request for money or offers of employment. The situation which I'm reviewing is the fact that my Nokia job is not sufficient income for half a household. I could afford last year's six-month apartment with
adrian_turtle partly because it was a smaller place and partly because I had built up savings. It is in the nature of savings to be finite. As things stand now, we are secure only if
derspatchel remains responsible for two-thirds of the rent and similar expenses, which is really not a long-term option. I had been meaning to ask for advice on this front at the beginning of the year, but the beginning of the year was rather more medical than planned—it took until this past week to feel that we were starting to stabilize again after the whole exciting bone-break experience—and now some developments have made the question particularly acute.
I have pretty much no fucking idea how to find a more than part-time job with my scattershot qualifications and physical limitations. I am aware that I am almost certainly overestimating the degree to which I am unemployable: I have two master's degrees and I'm very good with the written word, even if my resume displays almost as impressive a break after 2006 as Rob's ankle in January. I also have several chronic health issues: I fail to sleep on a regular basis: I have real reservations about any kind of work that requires me to be on my feet a lot of the time or holding down a fixed schedule. The Nokia job is great because it's work-from-home and doesn't care what hours I work so long as it's the same number every week, but it does not suffice. I have been recommended teaching and I worry about my stamina. I have been recommended editing and I don't know that my previous experience is professional enough. I'm sure there must be other options that are not retail, but I don't know where to start looking. I mean that almost literally.
And I know the economy is garbage right now, as it pretty much has been ever since I needed a job rather than a graduate student's stipend, but there must be something I haven't thought of. Hence leaving this post unlocked. I am trying to cast as wide a net of other people's opinions as possible. I will try not to bristle if you suggest things I have already thought of, or know for one reason or another will not actually work. Telling me that you would set me up for life as a writer if only you had the resources, however, is probably not very helpful to me.
(We will return to your regularly scheduled reportage of New York City sometime after I have slept and this migraine-like headache has stopped flickering at me. I am very pleased with how my portion of the reading went. It was cool to hear
rinue perform and meet
marlowe1 in person again now that his hair has changed color. Someone asked me to sign their copy of King David and the Spiders from Mars afterward and I had not been expecting that. There was currywurst. Definitely worth the trip.)
Please note that this post is not a request for money or offers of employment. The situation which I'm reviewing is the fact that my Nokia job is not sufficient income for half a household. I could afford last year's six-month apartment with
I have pretty much no fucking idea how to find a more than part-time job with my scattershot qualifications and physical limitations. I am aware that I am almost certainly overestimating the degree to which I am unemployable: I have two master's degrees and I'm very good with the written word, even if my resume displays almost as impressive a break after 2006 as Rob's ankle in January. I also have several chronic health issues: I fail to sleep on a regular basis: I have real reservations about any kind of work that requires me to be on my feet a lot of the time or holding down a fixed schedule. The Nokia job is great because it's work-from-home and doesn't care what hours I work so long as it's the same number every week, but it does not suffice. I have been recommended teaching and I worry about my stamina. I have been recommended editing and I don't know that my previous experience is professional enough. I'm sure there must be other options that are not retail, but I don't know where to start looking. I mean that almost literally.
And I know the economy is garbage right now, as it pretty much has been ever since I needed a job rather than a graduate student's stipend, but there must be something I haven't thought of. Hence leaving this post unlocked. I am trying to cast as wide a net of other people's opinions as possible. I will try not to bristle if you suggest things I have already thought of, or know for one reason or another will not actually work. Telling me that you would set me up for life as a writer if only you had the resources, however, is probably not very helpful to me.
(We will return to your regularly scheduled reportage of New York City sometime after I have slept and this migraine-like headache has stopped flickering at me. I am very pleased with how my portion of the reading went. It was cool to hear

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Such as Mass Rehab:
http://www.mass.gov/eohhs/consumer/disability-services/vocational-rehab/vr-services-2.html
Your local Somerville office is this one:
http://www.mass.gov/eohhs/consumer/disability-services/vocational-rehab/vr-area-offices/somerville.html
I know you don't get SSDI, or necessarily need it, but I'm willing to bet their resources will be very helpful.
Luck and love!
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Have you considered tech writing? You don't need domain-specific knowledge, just the ability to learn quickly, excellent writing skills, and fluency with publishing tools (eg, Word templates, other desktop publishing software that I don't know about).
A bunch of lobbying organizations and professional advocacy groups have staff writers to draft press releases, fundraiser letters, that sort of thing. I can put you in touch with someone who has one of those jobs, and she can tell you more about how she got her foot in the door.
Can you code at all? Can you learn? In spite of popular perception, there are jobs in tech for people who don't have MIT degrees: small businesses that can't afford the kinds of salaries MIT graduates demand, places that aren't "tech companies" per se but need part time or occasional tech work done, that sort of thing.
Tutoring came to mind, but I see commenters on LJ already have that covered.
Until you find something more regular, you could always volunteer for human subject experiments at local universities.
For a while in college I worked as a concierge at a fancy apartment building in the Back Bay. It was shitty in that the residents of the building were wicked classist and thought I was beneath their station, but I got paid for eight hours at a time, six of which were typically spent studying and/or reading novels, and two of which were spent doing tasks like ordering pizzas for residents, then transferring them from the pizza box to a literal silver platter and taking it upstairs for them.
Best of luck!
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I also have a friend who's been supplementing his part-time work with freelance textbook indexing, so if that's something that would be of interest to you I can ask him how he got started with that.
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Depends what you want out of the job, really...
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For you, what about seeing if there's anything at any of the museums that you could do? or in libraries? I know you don't have a library science degree or any museum-related degree, but maybe your knowledge of latin and greek would help you in either of those sorts of jobs? Help cataloguing or indexing things, or something? Are there assistant TA-type positions open at any of the areas colleges that would be limited enough, timewise, that you could do them? I know Harvard used to hire people to teach expository writing on a sort of adjunct basis--that might be something. What about substitute teaching in the public school system? How about something relating to film? Does the Harvard film archive need anyone? … I'm not sure what you would do for them, but maybe something? Or at Coolidge Corner? (I mean something other than selling the popcorn… I guess I'm imagining there'd be something that would involve helping management--maybe writing a newsletter or something.) How about proofreading positions at any of the local artsy-papers? There are bunches of think-tanky type places and interesting NGOs in the area--would the Union of Concerned Scientists need anyone to manage a newsletter, say, or Cultural Survival? You can go to these places' websites and see what things they have available.
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work
May I suggest, on the basis of what you have written, proof reading both generally, and specifically student dissertations and theses.
I am sure that you are aware of the limitations of spell checker, even when it is used. I built up a small reputation at the university I worked for for proof reading technical and scientific theses, even though I rarely had any clue as to the subject matter. A generalisation I know, but talent in the hard sciences does not necessarily go hand in hand with punctuation and grammatical skills.
Advertising in student rags may be a start, or if you live near a university flyers on departmental notice boards, hopefully leading on to word of mouth recommendations.
You could do this online and perhaps you could fit it around a standard part time job.
In any case you have my best wishes in the making ends meet department
Sara.
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Re: work
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Oh wait, I do have to say one thing. For the love of heaven don't do museum docent work or become anything like a tour guide. You've heard me talk about how much it takes out of me, or if you haven't then you are now. I wear the chain I forged in life. You spend your job time on your feet and have to have your game-face on all the time. If that's not enough to put you off, it usually pays like $8/hour and the hours aren't flexible.
Sometimes interesting stuff pops up on hireculture.org that I'm not qualified for, recruiting for research-based positions, archaeological digs, stuff like that. Could be worth watching.
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*hugs*
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P.
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How to get one where you are? See if any of the Silicon Valley companies are doing this? Try Erickson and Cisco.
Since that's really a long shot, there's Elance (http://www.elance.com), which connects freelancers with jobs. Their physical presence is about a mile from my house, and was downstairs from my previous job, plus I know people who work there and people who use them, so it's not a fly-by-night place. You might have luck there. In fact, you might be able to get work from there while maintaining your current Nokia job.
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Oh and the guy that asked you to sign the book was Alex - aka the first reviewer on Amazon. He has been very supportive which does compensate for other personality quirks.
And aren't you a freelance writer already? You definitely should get on that train. You know enough authors to interview for articles and review books which is usually the lower tier of freelancing. I can send you some more if you'd like (I usually suggest that people interview me, but it would be odd in this case since the main thing I'm plugging is the book).
I didn't last long as a freelancer. I had wanted to get back on it. The last thing I sold was that Cracked article - which has a very different pitch format than usual non-fiction markets. They pay fifty bucks per article, but it can be very time consuming getting a pitch together.
As far as freelancing went, I sold a couple of reviews and an interview and then my friend told me about someone that needed her law school statement written, so I began my current writing career.
If you don't mind the ethics of that kind of freelancing, it is quite fun.
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Other than that I cannot think of anything of use I could add. I will continue searching my brains for something helpful.
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