A Freelance Writing Mom’s Schedule – What’s Yours Like?

Some freelance writing Moms are writing at home with babies underfoot and some write for a living with school aged kids that are either in school or home schooled. I’ve met plenty of freelance writers who have had various situations to contend with.  Super WAHMs do it all with a smile on their face (most of the time, anyway).

While your schedule is going to vary depending on a lot of things, having a schedule is a very good idea for ensuring that:

  • Your work gets done and your writing career blossoms
  • Your house doesn’t go to pot
  • Your family doesn’t feel neglected
  • You don’t crash and burn out

One of the great things about a freelance career that allows you to work from home is that it can be flexible.  That said, you have to run it like a real business if you truly expect it to be successful.

I have a child in school full-time and another in school alternate days as he’s in junior kindergarten. I thought that this year would bring me oodles of time with every other day free but so far it hasn’t resulted in my not having to work nights and weekends yet.  So I need to fix that as I strive for balance.

WAHM Schedules

I’m working on devising a new schedule to try to cope with work and the house and still try to find things I like to do such as watch my favourite shows, spend time with my family, have time to put make-up on and flat iron my hair once in a while. Not to mention maybe even getting to read a novel or paint my nails every once in a while,too!

Here’s what I’ve recently come up with for the days both boys are in school. When they’re home, some couples have Daddy watch the wee ones while Mommy catches up on work and some Moms just struggle trying to do it all and stay up really late or just let the housework go down the tubes. I often surround myself with things to occupy the wee one and so do other wahms I know (Lego, Play Doh, Bratz Dolls and accessories if you have girls, craft supplies, etc) Some wahms hire a Mommy’s helper once in a while which is a great idea, too. Whatever your situation is, a schedule should help.

The following is a schedule I’m planning to follow on the days the Wee Boy is in school in the hopes that the days he is home I’ll have more time to do things with him as well as get some work time in:

I’ll let you know how it goes.

8:20-10:am: Read and respond to new e-mails, check on all my sites and passive earning and affiliate marketing earning reports plus write for my daily blog gigs

10:am-10:30: Housework

10:30-11: Exercise

11-12: Break to watch Y&R :)

12pm: Eat lunch and then do my freelance writing work until 4:ish when kids come home

4-6:30: Family time, dinner, misc housework

6:30-8: Work

8-12: Family/Hubby/Coronation Street/ Dana time

*****

Today what I generally do is just multitask my rear end off all day long and often alternate between family and work until I flop into bed (way too late) at night. I tend to let the house go when work is crazy and a messy house messes with my creativity so it’s definitely advantageous of me to try to find more balance.

Hopefully this schedule will result in productivity work wise when I have no kids in the house and allow me to be more flexible and less harried on weekends and the days that the 5 year old is home with me.

I’d love to hear about your scheduling challenges and your scheduling solutions.

6 Comment(s)

  1. I am so bad at scheduling. I’m sure my 2 year old has something to do with that. However, this is an area I strive to perfect. I am recently a single mom (been separated from my husband since December) and so far I am still making it on my WAH income, however I am beginning to feel the burn. I know that is coming from my lack f a schedule. One thing I have begun to do is write a couple of hours after my son has gone to bed. I bring my laptop into bed with me, so I am relaxed. That has ben working well, however, I desperately need a daytime schedule, too.

    Jacky | Apr 17, 2009 | Reply

  2. Hi Jacky,
    I really need to get a laptop and get ‘unplugged’ from my desk (which sometimes feels like a prison)

    But then I’m a bit worried I’ll never ever “not” work, too. I don’t want to be reading emails or writing in the midst of my favourite shows.

    It would, however, be nice to write in the back yard while the kids are playing outside though.

    Good luck and thanks for stopping by :)

    Dana

    Dana Prince | Apr 17, 2009 | Reply

  3. I don’t yet have kids, but scheduling is still a pain for me. I have a Palm Centro with my daily calendar, but like you I multitask throughout the day. I used to have a schedule for each task, but I let that go by the wayside. Now that I have a bit more time (i.e., still seeking clients), I really need to get my schedule back on track again!

    Do you have a particular calendar system you like to use? I tried Outlook but it was hard to work with it.

    Cheers,
    Marjorie

    Marjorie | Apr 24, 2009 | Reply

  4. Hi Marjorie,

    I have a dayplanner and use a spreadsheet to track everything as well. The spreadsheet is my general to-do list which also lets me keep track of my billing and I schedule tasks into my dayplanner. I’ve also used Gmail Tasks but find that so far my paper planner and spreadsheet combo seems to work better for me.
    Thanks for stopping by :)

    Dana Prince | Apr 24, 2009 | Reply

  5. I have work time schedule. First thing in the morning is to prepare breakfast for my kids who will go to school and for my husband who will go to work. Then do all the regular house chores. After that is my time for my work at home as a freelance writer. I just see to it that I give much time for my family before anything else. As of the moment, everything went well. I was able to manage my time efficiently.

    Patrice | Aug 10, 2009 | Reply

  6. :~~ I am very thankful to this topic because it really gives great information `.-

    Natural Treatments | Jan 25, 2011 | Reply

1 Trackback(s)

  1. Apr 24, 2009: from » Freelance Friday - April 24, 2009 : All Freelance Writing

Post a Comment