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What do you do with your free time?

A full time adsenser

         

roycerus

4:14 am on Jan 12, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I recently quit my day job and started my own proprietorship. But somehow this "Working at home" things is making me feel weird.

Am I happier? Yes - much more than I was when I worked the day job - more so cause my boss was an idiot.

Now, I spend a lot of time on the development of my websites but there is definitely "More free time".
I wonder what others like me do with that free time. You can't watch TV all the time! And I am smoking more and sitting idle more than ever. Not Good!

incrediBILL

9:38 am on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



OK, don't listen to these charlatans, I've been working at home much longer.

1- Skip the dog, get a cat. Much easier to haul out a bag of cat crap once a week than walk a dog every time they start doing the potty dance when you're in 'the zone' or have to get the mop when the dog drains on the floor.

2- I love old cars too, but that's what mechanics are for. If you make enough in AdSense you can hire some grease monkey to restore it instead of scraping your knuckles.

3- STOP SMOKING NOW and take up drinking. Replacing a liver is much more common than a lung transplant, if you must abuse yourself do it the least fatal way.

4- Whoever said "A penny saved is a penny earned" has really crappy keywords for their website and/or is being abused by smart pricing.

5- Forget the girlfriend, if you tick them off they'll click you out of AdSense and if you marry them they'll take half your AdSense revenue when they boot you to the curb

6- Bicycle? HAHAHAH! Damages your manly plumbing perhaps beyond the help of a blue pill, what some people will say.

7- Gym? So you can die a pretty corpse? The bacteria could care less.

You want to know the true secret to working at home?

BEER!

That's the answer, lots of beer and PubCon as often as possible!

Mistra

9:50 am on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Is incrediBill the webmaster of one of those joke sites?

I agree with this statement:

7- Gym? So you can die a pretty corpse? The bacteria could care less.

Whether rich or poor, fat or slim, pretty or ugly...

worms, maggots, ants, bacteria, (or fire) are waiting for all of us. :(

BuildHome

10:02 am on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Plan your next website with Google Adsense :)

roycerus

10:11 am on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



LOl - Thanks for the advice incrediBILL - I think you are right on every count. I always enjoy your witty and many a times aggressive posts. :-)

rj87uk

10:19 am on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



3- STOP SMOKING NOW and take up drinking. Replacing a liver is much more common than a lung transplant, if you must abuse yourself do it the least fatal way.

LOL ^

jetteroheller

10:20 am on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



I heard someone mention going to fairs and conferences

That's work, not free time.

Only some times, it's a little bit free time, for example last summer 3 days fair, after the fair swimming in a lake beside the camping place where I slept with my wife.

For health, it's good that my wife propels me often to make a 1.5 hours walk in the mountains near by.

darkmage

3:49 pm on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



The key is to try to overlap activity with fun.
1. Learn to dance - well. Salsa chews up huge amounts of energy. If your girlfriend ever leaves, this will help you get a new one
2. Draw a 3km circle on the map around your house. Mark up every interesting bar, cafe, resturaunt and shop - visit three per week - on foot. Don't over-eat - just enjoy. Take a digitial camera.
3. Do strange or fun courses. Not the usual stuff, but something a little out there.
4. Learn something creative - play an instrument, act, sing
5. Travel more.

ronin

5:16 pm on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

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Learn a language - that will keep you busy, expand your horizons, your social circle and (possibly) your businees opportunities.

fearlessrick

10:25 pm on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Since this thread has devolved into jokesterism, thanks to incredbibill, I thought I'd respond.

1. Don't get a dog or a cat. They leave hair all over, plus some people - like me - are allergic to their dander. However, If you don't want me coming over and drinking all your beer, get a dog or cat. Turtles actually make great pets.

2. Restoring cars is a pain. Buy a new car, preferably a sports car.

3.Smoke your brains out, drink heavily and gamble daily. To the "investors" out there, the horses pay a much better return. Plus, winning daily is much preferred to watching stocks go up .30 or even $1. Gambling is tax free investing.

4.See #3. Save? For what? Death is inevitable.

5. Many girlsfriends are preferable to just one.

6. The stuff about bicycling and your nether parts is pure rubbish. Ask Lance Armstrong. After overcoming cancer, he won the Tour 7 times and married Mia Hamm. Have you seen her? See's hot and looks pretty happy.

7. Working out is tough. Tennis, hoops and cycling is way more fun.

I fully agree that BEER is essential to happiness and getting closer to your inner child, sometimes, too close.

My advice, burn candles at both ends, cheat on your taxes (admit it, we all do), ignore authority of all kinds and buy gold with your earnings from adsense and gambling. Die of a heart attack. Quick and neat.

incrediBILL

10:52 pm on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Since this thread has devolved into jokesterism, thanks to incredbibill

Jokesterism?

I may have come across with an amusing bent but people that really know me know that I'm pretty serious about most of what I said even in a humorous vein.

I'm not a rabid anti-smoker but when my hair starts to smell like smoke don't be surprised when you feel your head getting wet and see me, a drinker, standing on a chair next to you getting even.

plus some people - like me - are allergic to their dander

Another upside to owning a cat - people - like you - will leave me alone

Just kidding...

Die of a heart attack. Quick and neat.

Agreed.

ndaru

11:45 pm on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



This reminds me to my days of telecommuting. I thought it was great, at first. No more daily commute, no more rush hours.

It didn't take long before I realize that it was really hard to motivate myself to keep the jobs done. Nobody to interact to, real people, not via forum or chatting. And neighbours kept thinking that I have free time they can ask for help.

Since you've been decided to become the boss of your own, I wish you good luck. If maintaining your websites requires you to interact with real people, that's good. If not, allow yourself to come out once in a while to eateries or parks, and have some nice chats.

zCat

11:52 pm on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



1- Skip the dog, get a cat. Much easier to haul out a bag of cat crap once a week than walk a dog every time they start doing the potty dance when you're in 'the zone' or have to get the mop when the dog drains on the floor.

Make that once every two or three days, especially if the cat doesn't go outside, otherwise the cat will quite probably find its own way of giving your residence an olfactory makeover.

jhood

11:55 pm on Jan 13, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Who said anything about restoriing the old sports car? I have an '81 Alfa Romeo Spider that is pretty disreputable looking and sounds even worse. I start it up on cold mornings to blast the frost off my neighbors' windows.

When frustrated by the world of the Web, I load dog in Alfa and go blasting around our otherwise peaceful neighborhood. The dog barks, the car rumbles and spits, neighbors curse. The parade passes, in short.

I only do easy stuff to the car and am otherwise what is known as a checkbook mechanic. New sports cars are OK too but in my experience are not nearly as much fun as they are not as disreputable, shocking, annoying and generally in-your-face as an old, loud, smelly rustbucket festooned with racing badges, rude bumper stickers and blatantly bootlegged safety/emission stickers. An ugly dog scowling out the back completes the package nicely.

Oh, beer. Forgot to mention that. Cheap red wine will also suffice.

ndaru

12:01 am on Jan 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Almost forget, skip the dog and the cat. Unless you're really committed to care them, their incessant nagging for your attention can be really a nuisance. Plus they suffer most when you were skipping meal simply because you're too glued to your computer monitor. Maybe you can stand to miss a meal or two, but cats can't (I don't know about dogs).

LifeinAsia

12:07 am on Jan 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



Gambling is tax free investing.

Not! Once you get a big win that's reported to the tax authorities, good luck in trying to justify that your "investment" (losses) balanced out your winnings.

GoldenHammer

2:23 am on Jan 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Save some of your income.

Use spare time to make investment and a physical execrise as your life time interest.

GoldenHammer

2:24 am on Jan 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



[Gambling is tax free investing.]

Gambling is fine if you could manage yourself well on the risk management.

alwaysthinking

4:39 am on Jan 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I lived in Las Vegas for over twenty years - my biggest winnings was from the Real Estate market, and most of the gains were accrued during the last three years...

Gaming (Casino Gambling) can be exciting entertainment, and occasionally profitable. BUT I would NEVER consider it as a sound investment strategy... only FOOLS think that way... You can easily lose EVERYTHING in a heartbeat gambling... it is pretty hard (unless you are VERY stupid) to lose EVERYTHING in the stock market, although stock loses are normal. You make it up on the NEXT investment...

Over the years, I've seen too many people lose their jobs, house, families, and even their lives because of their gambling habits... If anyone of you (you know who you are) have a "problem" with gambling, I suggest that you seek professional help before you suffer drastic consequences.

It is very possible to get over the compusive behavior, my main client was a "recreational" gambler. He was/is a RE agent in Vegas, and I used to have a nicer car than he had, even though he made three times the amount of money that I did. I also owned my home... he didn't... and he was always borrowing money from people...

A year after he quit gambling... he had a brand new Sport Utility to haul around his clients in, and a nice new home.... he also had money in the bank....and the "funny" thing about it... he was making THE SAME AMOUNT OF MONEY as he was when he was a broke Gambler!

Now it's a few years past that... and he has tripled his income because he is doing so much more business... Pretty much the same amount of work as before.... BUT his attitude has improved so much... and his clients sense his success (did they sense the loser Gambler in the past?)...

Morale: Don't use Gambling as your 401k instrument

larryhatch

2:57 pm on Jan 14, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I drink beer and smoke lots of cigarettes. -Larry

jetteroheller

9:47 am on Jan 15, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



BUT I would NEVER consider it as a sound investment strategy...

My father in law from my first wife was at the roulette in Austrian Casinos employed.

One day, there was a head line in Austrian newspapers: "Oil shiekh wins 1 million in roulette"

I asked him about this. "All only fairy tails, he won one day 1 million, but he lost all the week 2 millions"

idolw

10:45 am on Jan 15, 2006 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I also run out for coffee at the local cafe every day so I get some human interaction.

ken_b, so you already know how life in 50 years will look like :))
have you considered starting a blog that would change into a printed book after 2-3 years? I would be your first frequent visitor ;-)

Roel

12:47 am on Jan 16, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hi jema, I think you are right. I guess I have lost a bit of that drive after I left the job. While on the job I was working about 14 hours a day - about 9 hours office work and about 5 hours website development. I think this sudden change and this freedom has made me lazy.

This happened to me as well. It's temporary. It is because you were working so hard before (as was I) and you're body has something like "ah rest..."

After a couple of months it will get better and you will feel great getting up at the same time (7AM orso), actually putting on clothes and doing some work.

Just don't let it go to far.

If I could recommand something in the mean time; read a good religious book orso. I have read "The Purpose Driven Life" by "Rick Warren" and it changed my life (and my business).

See how you go!

Roel

12:48 am on Jan 16, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I drink beer and smoke lots of cigarettes. -Larry

You would be silly to follow this advice obviously

RoadRash

1:52 am on Jan 16, 2006 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hike, bike, travel, eat out more, play more and best yet, sleeping when / where i want. :D

OptiRex

2:53 am on Jan 16, 2006 (gmt 0)



I was getting depressed as I read this thread until I saw incrediBILL's post...I was thinking "How the hell am I going to lighten these guys' attitudes?"

This is going to be quite a strange post to write since I have been well-documented in many articles as the original UK/European technology business homeworker! A long time before homeworking was even considered a viable agenda anywhere.

And believe me, that was in the days BEFORE the fax machine! Phones or telexes, that was it...ok, telegrams!

So, after 30+ years what have I learnt? It's quite simple:

You are the master of your own destiny.

It's your decision when you take a break.

It's your decision when you do anything.

It's your decision as to whatever you do.

They are your decisions as to whether or not you make a success of it.

It is not suited to all however for those with the confidence and self-will to achieve, it will be the most rewarding decision you have ever made.

And on a personal observation after seeing and coaching many others through to a similar lifestyle...money is not the be all and end all of it.

Now at what time do you what that coffee? :-))

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