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How to Manage Your Side Hustle and Family Life So You Don’t Go Insane

Tags: hustle family

There may come a time in your life where you want to or need to create a side Hustle to earn extra income. It can be many things depending on your skills and the depth of your need. Regardless of what you choose, it will be something you do on the side (apart from your day job) to bring in additional money to the family budget.

Side hustles can be a financial blessing. They can help you build up your savings account or pay off debt or meet any a number of financial goals you might have.

However, while the additional income of a side hustle is welcome, there is a dark side that many are unprepared for. Side hustles, done improperly, can be a curse on family life.

It’s one thing to have a side hustle if you are single. I remember talking with a blogging friend who told me how he’d work his 9 to 5, take a 30-minute dinner (maybe) and then work till past midnight writing and networking. I’m not saying that’s necessarily an easy schedule but it’s not like you have anyone else to account for. It’s just you.

When a spouse and/or kids are in the picture side hustles take on a whole different dimension.

There is a tension that immediately surfaces the minute one member of the family begins a side hustle. What was a normal life is no longer normal.

You know the side hustle must be done to improve your financial life. But you also know family life matters. How can you manage it all and not go insane?

Here are a few strategies I’ve used over the years as I’ve managed a career, side hustles (my blogs) and family life.

Cast the Vision and Set Expectations

This is all about changing your mindset and preparing the family for what lies ahead. Things are going to be different now that one of the adults is engaged in an additional money making activity.  It’s best everyone in the family knows what to expect.

So you’ll have to cast the vision of why the side hustle is important. Talk about the financial need, your dreams and what this could mean for the family down the road.

Develop a list of financial goals you’d like to reach, like creating an emergency fund. Check those off one by one as you reach them. This will build excitement and momentum. It will also keep the family motivated to keep the side hustle going as long as needed.

Related Content: Emergency Fund Basics: The Step on Which All Other Success is Built

Make sure the other members of the family know when you will be busy and when you will be available. Set some standards for the home environment that will be conducive to getting work done. As tough as it may be (especially on kids) everyone needs to minimize interruptions so the one pursuing the side hustle can work efficiently.

Finally, agree on how the other members of the family are going to step up and share the burden of running the household. The one running the side hustle will have less time to devote to household responsibilities. Others will have to agree to fill the gap for the side hustle to work.

Free Up or Create New Time

By far the greatest barrier to a side hustle is time. “I don’t have enough time” is already the #1 excuse we use for not getting stuff done. Add a side hustle to the schedule and any free time will be eaten up.

This became readily apparent when I first started blogging. I’d come home from work and spend the evening writing. It worked for a week or so until I realized other tasks I’d done before during that time were falling by the wayside.

How could I fit it all in?

The answer is you can’t, unless you make some adjustments.

First, I chose to free up some time. I cut back on almost all TV watching, video/computer game playing and social media use. I also started saying “No” to some outside-the-home activities with friends and cutting back on my responsibilities at work.

Next I chose to create new time. How did I do that since one cannot simply add hours to the day?

What I mean by create new time is to find time that you weren’t using before and incorporate it into your new daily schedule. For me that meant getting up earlier to write before work – sometimes as early as four in the morning. I could write for two solid hours before getting ready for work. That took the pressure off of writing in the evening hours and allowed me to focus more on the family’s needs.

Finding additional time wasn’t easy and it did cut back on my sleep. That is going to make the next issue really important.

Take Breaks and Maintain Your Energy Level

No one can go 24-7 even though we like to tell ourselves so. Our bodies need time for rest and relaxation. So not all the hours of the day should be devoted to your main job and your side hustle.

Taking breaks from your moneymaking endeavors will do several things. It will:

  • Make sure you re-connect with the family
  • Prevent burnout
  • Give you opportunities to celebrate your progress
  • Help you avert workaholism
  • Allow you opportunities to pursue casual, enjoyable endeavors

Related Content: All Work and No Play: Combating the Dangers of Workaholism

Taking breaks is important but it’s not enough. The increased workload means less time for relaxation and sleep. You’ll likely be more tired than you’ve ever been before. That’s why it’s vital that some of the new time you create must be for exercise.

The benefits of exercise have been well documented. I could see it in my own life when I was training for my marathons 3-4 times a week. Running produced energy for my body. You’ll need the same energy to maintain the side hustle and interact with your family.

Get the Side Hustle Organized

As soon as you start the side hustle your whole world will become a jumbled mess. What once was manageable now seems chaotic. It feels like you need to hire a personal assistant just to help you keep track of all that is going on.

You don’t need a personal assistant but you do need to get organized. Even if you are an organized person you need to get more organized. I live a pretty efficient lifestyle and I was constantly letting things slip by.

Two things helped.

For starters, I developed a schedule for my writing and decided on the days I wanted to post an article to my blog. That helped me map out when I would be writing and plan my work schedule ahead of time.

Secondly, we streamlined all of our various calendars into one by using Google Calendar. All our work, personal and school activities were blended onto an Internet based calendar that we could access anytime, anywhere and see what events were planned. This kept me from double-booking my writing time with a kid ballgame or other activity.

You’ll have to do something similar with whatever side hustle you pursue. Life will get hectic and it will be easy to lose track of important family events. Develop a system that’s easy for all the family to use so you stay connected to what’s going on.

When in Doubt Always Default to Family

My final suggestion to balancing family life with your side hustle seems like an easy one. In reality, it will be harder than you think. Here’s why.

It’s exciting to start making money! But sometimes you can go after money to an extent that you neglect the family.

I remember one time about a year into writing I was working on a post when my then 10 yr-old son comes walking into the living room with his football. Tossing the football in the air he casually says, “Dad, you busy?” Nothing subtle about that question is there?

Feeling the pressure to complete my post I said, “Yes, I can’t play right now. Maybe later.”

I’m thinking “…maybe later…” means 3 or 4 hours from now or perhaps even tomorrow. My son didn’t think that. How do I know? Because 10 minutes later he’s peeking around the corner of the living room, football in hand, giving me the longing-eyes look that’s saying, “Are you done yet?”

I got it. I closed the laptop and went outside to throw the football.

Side hustles are required sometimes. Our financial lives don’t always go as planned. Whatever you choose to take on give it your best effort and reach those goals you’ve laid out for yourself.

But never take on a side hustle at the expense of the immediate family. Nothing is worth losing connection with the ones you love. You’ll never regret defaulting to family where your time is concerned.

Find a Side Hustle That Is Right For You

If you are looking into earning some extra money with a side hustle, you are in luck. There are many things you can do. I’ve chosen writing because a) it’s a skill I possess, b) it fits my schedule and c) it’s scalable if I want it to be.

But there are so many other things that can be done in the online or offline world. You simply have to find something that sparks your interest and that you can manage with your family schedule.

Here are a few links with ideas to get the juices flowing:

70+ Ways to Make Money on the Side. (This is a series of posts compiled by J Money at Budgets Are Sexy. These are real stories from regular people who are kicking it in gear on the side.)

50+ Side Hustles You Can Start Pretty Quickly For $50 or Less

Side Hustle Nation (This is a whole website run by Nick Loper devoted to jobs you can do on the side.)

Best of luck finding a side hustle that works for you. It can take you to a whole new level of financial stability. Just don’t let it take your family.

Questions: What experience do you have with doing a side hustle to earn extra money? How do you manage your side hustle and all your other commitments? What piece of advice would you give to someone thinking about starting a side hustle?

Original image by Geraint Rowland at Flickr Creative Commons

The post How to Manage Your Side Hustle and Family Life So You Don’t Go Insane appeared first on Luke1428.



This post first appeared on Luke1428 - Hope For Your Financial Journey And Bey, please read the originial post: here

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