Over the last two months, as I’ve been learning to run my own freelancing business, I’ve struggled with some of the non-writing aspects of the job: conferences calls, social niceties, corporate etiquette.
More specifically, I have trouble getting people to call me back. I leave messages. I write emails. I set up meeting times. But no matter what, I end up waiting for important phone calls when I should be working. Days of wasted time go by as clients who don’t realize I can’t work on their project until I talk to them about it on the phone - and much of the time I just need a one-word answer to a simple question like, do you want this in first person?
Today, though, I think I figured it out once and for all. And it is so, so, simple. Ready? About one minute before you want to an important client to get back to you about an issue, pour a big bowl of cereal. And not a hearty twigs-and-nuts cereal that takes a good seven minutes to absorb milk - I’m talking about your Rice Crispies or Cheerios. The cereals that are ticking time bombs of sogginess.
Your phone will ring as soon as you finish pouring the milk. You won’t get the first bite in before you’re deep in conversation: “Hi Sarah - sorry not to get back to you sooner, but I was engaged in some time-sensitive activities. Now, however, I have quite a chunk of information I’d like to walk you though regarding the ebook. It shouldn’t take too long - I would guess it will only take as long as it takes for a single serving of Reese’s Peanut Butter Puffs in milk to deteriorate into a thick glue.”
And you can’t say, “Sorry, but even though it’s 3 p.m. I’ve got some Cookie Crunch to attend to,” or, “Sorry, but Count Chocula is on the other line.”
But even though you waste a bowl of cereal, but they call every time. What first seemed like an inconvenience is a blessing in disguise.
I’m pretty sure this can also be applied to other aspects of life, too. Waiting to hear back from that job interview? Try drawing yourself a hot bath filled with time-sensitive bubbles. Waiting for a boy to call about a second date after three days of torture? Try mixing a fresh batch of cement. He’ll want to talk about his feelings for hours.
I remember the first day I went into Manhattan. Ben and I emerged from Penn Station and were immediately overwhelmed by the crowded, churning beehive of activity that is midtown. It was rush hour and about a million worker drones were rushing back to New Jersey just as we emerged - two country bumpkins with no idea how to walk in a crowd of people.
For the first time in my life, I’ve dealt with back problems this last week. It probably has something to do with the fact that I don’t have a good office chair and have refused to buy one before our move to Montana in June. This means that I run my freelance writing business form 1) the Salvation Army chair that looks pretty nice but feels like I paid $10 for it, which is true 2) the free sofa bed in our living room that forces you to slouch and 3) my bed. It seems like as much as I mix up these three environments, it feels like I’ll have a hunchback by, say, Thursday.
Elaine Marshall’s life seemed perfect - she had two loving children, a supportive and strangely fashionable husband, and a summer cabin for mini-vacations. However, her husband was hiding a horrible secret from her. During all of the years of her marriage, she never seemed to notice that her life partner Jim liked daffodils more than most men and that he spent a little too much time making sure his socks perfectly matched his outfit.
1. The handful of trees that line our street are in bloom.



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