Self-Employment: One Selfish Way to Financial Independence

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Photo by Brandon King

This is the first in a series of 3 articles about how to achieve success and financial freedom through selfish means. You should subscribe to find out what the next two ingredients to selfish success are, because the self-employment step is not enough on its own.

It’s Wrong to Be Selfish

We learn at a very young age that being selfish is a bad thing. We are taught to share, and especially as women, we are taught that we should put other people’s needs before ours. As women, we are the providers, the mothers, those who make sure everything is good for our family members. But what if being selfish is actually a good trait?

Now don’t get me wrong, I don’t want to suggest that you start stealing toys out of your neighbors’ hands, or go on a shopping rampage. Yet, I would like you to consider the benefits of being selfish. As Barbara Sher recommends in her book Wishcraft, being selfish about your goals makes you happier and more fun to be around.

Think back to your childhood. How many times have you felt guilty for the sacrifices your parents made for you, your education, and your well being? I’m sure we can all remember times like these.

Now imagine if instead of coming home to your overstressed mother, who had cleaned the house, and cooked dinner, your mother was showing you her great new painting? Or, if your father did not come home frustrated trying to put food on the table, but instead played a sport with you in the backyard?

We can all manage to get by without a squeaky clean house, provided that our inner desires are fulfilled. This applies to other areas of your life, as we’re going to be exploring in the rest of the Selfish Series.

Quick History of Self-Employment

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Photo by Hannah Webster

Self-Employement Role Models

I like My Job, I Don’t Want to Be Self-Employed

Whether or not you love your current job, you should actually consider adding a slice of self-employment to your life. Barbara J. Winter suggests that you think of your current full-time job as just one of your profit centers. This allows you to see your life in the grand scheme of things, and not just in terms of one source of income. Learning to create multiple sources of income is one of the most useful skills in today’s less than stable economy.

As Pamela Slim noted on her site Escape From Cubicle Nation, many people who lost their jobs due to banking problems recently, must have felt a tremendous stress. Yet if some of them had a side income coming in, they probably didn’t feel as much pressure. I’m not suggesting that you are likely to lose your job, but I am suggesting that by creating more than one profit center, you are giving yourself a backup plan and increased security.

What Does Self-Employment Give You?

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Photo by Khalid Almasoud

I Don’t Have Any Skills or Anything to Sell

Everyone has skills, whether you realize it or not. Creating new profit centers, and becoming a little bit more self-employed, is easier than you think. It’s as easy as turning one of your hobbies into a profitable venture. The following is a short list of ideas to get you started.

What Other Ideas Do You Have?

If you’ve been thinking of adding a slice of self-employment to your life, by creating a new profit center, now is the time! What ideas are brewing in your mind? Don’t forget to stay tuned, because there are two other steps to the selfish financial freedom strategy, and they aren’t pretty!

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