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| image: Mark Pell on Unsplash |
Over the years, we've spent a lot of time sitting together at my virtual kitchen table, discussing the ups and downs of making ends meet on moderate incomes. We've celebrated the deals we've found on groceries and household items. We've discussed making substitutions that fit within our budget better than the standard options. We've detailed the frugal ways embedded into our holidays, vacations, and days' out so as not to break the bank. We've talked about being good stewards of the bounty we've been given. And this weekend we talked about the enjoyment we gain from many of the free experiences and opportunities in our lives.
But today I want to look at the other side of the ledger, the side that acknowledges that sometimes scrimping and saving aren't enough to offset expenses. In my own story, there have been seasons where no matter how tightly I pulled that belt, the math simply didn't add up. The budget didn't need another cut; we needed a bridge to cover the gap.
Together my husband and I have worked to boost our income at several points in our married life. We have both worked side gigs to bring in the little extra we needed in the moment. And now, as my husband and I approach the time in life when working income dwindles or even stops in many cases, we understand that we will have to rely on all we have saved or continue to bring in just a little extra.
This desire for just a little more each month is compounded by the incongruency between how inflation affects workers compared to retirees. When you're fully employed and inflation in the cost of daily necessities hits, at least you can feel relatively assured that there will be some sort of cost of living raise at the end of the year. When you retire, cost of living increases in entitlement benefits tend to be small compared to the actual increases in your "just surviving life" bills. In retirement, we will still pay property taxes, medical/dental insurance and copays, grocery bills, and energy to power and heat our home.
There are some help programs in place for some of these major expenses, but they are often only available for the very low end of the financial asset population. For those of us somewhere in the middle, where we have some assets going into retirement, but we are not truly wealthy, we need some sort of back-up plan to bring in additional income in those early years of retirement, while we still have health and energy going for us.
The Professional Touch: Wisdom at the Desk
Hobbies That Fund Themselves
I have brought cash into our family's coffers over the years through babysitting, working a few hours per week at our church, writing for a newspaper, and sewing items for sale.
A top contender for micro-gig work in this season of my life would use my gardening skills. I could start heirloom vegetable seedlings in late winter to sell, using the grow lights I already have. Heirloom tomato plants and annual flowers are the most sought after plants in spring. I could use an honor box (securely attached to a table) in our driveway on some early May weekend for the selling part. In our neighborhood, this would do very well. I could even turn a larger part of our yard into a single-crop, luxury vegetable garden to sell produce via farmers' markets or our local facebook group. In addition, I could garden-sit for neighbors who travel.
Other possibilities -- I could return to sewing items for sale by consignment in the gift shop where one of my daughters sells her artwork. I could also continue to hone my writing skills and write for other publications. Or, I could pull together some of my past blog posts into a curated booklet to sell.
The Reward of Breathing Room
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| image: 光术 山影 on Unsplash |




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