December 21, 2004

“successful”

eric.jpg
Last week I was moa­ning about being broke. Luc­kily, my situa­tion has since chan­ged, thanks to various ships coming in at the last minute. But yeah, it was a close call. Regard­less, last week I was spen­ding a lot of time bea­ting myself up for not being more “suc­cess­ful”.
Then this mor­ning I was thin­king. I gra­dua­ted from college in 1989. Since then I’ve been making a living exc­lu­si­vely as a wri­ter, with the occa­sio­nal car­toon gig to add to the mix. I’ve somehow always mana­ged to sur­vive, some­ti­mes even the money was pretty darn fabu­lous. I’ve never had to go back to ten­ding bar or wor­king retail, like I did in my stu­dent days. Besi­des wri­ting the occa­sio­nal piece I was proud of, and the fact that I mostly enjoy it– even the boring stuff– wri­ting has affor­ded me inten­sely inte­res­ting expe­rien­ces in pla­ces like New York, LA, Lon­don, Edin­burgh, Paris, Chi­cago…
Wri­ting paid for it all, plus it gave me the time and con­fi­dence to work on the car­toons. Just a guy, sit­ting at his lap­top, doing what I’m doing now.
Yeah, maybe I should count my bles­sings more… maybe I’m more “suc­cess­ful” than I give myself cre­dit for.
Heh. Merry Christ­mas, Everybody.

6 Responses to ““successful””

  1. Andreas says:

    You know, I was having a little bout of depres­sion myself a cou­ple of days back. The com­pany is doing well, and is actually making a modest pro­fit just six months after being launched, but I need to make more cash to be able to sur­vive. I will pro­bably need to take a CD gig again. Which anno­yed me no end for a while.
    Then I went for a walk in the snow and when I came back my mood was ligh­ter. Like you, I am doing exactly what I want to do. My talent sup­ports me, I’ve wor­ked for some world class clients and did some work I am proud of. I’ve wor­ked all over the world, I got a wife I couldn’t be hap­pier with and things really are groovy, everything con­si­de­red.
    So yes, I am too coun­ting my bles­sings after all. Merry Christ­mas everybody.

  2. The Pur­pose Dri­ven Life

    I was rea­ding O’Reilly Show trasnc­ripts and came across one where Bill is tal­king to the author of

  3. jeff z says:

    If you’ve been making a living with your talent and crea­ti­vity directly, you’re very suc­cess­ful. I’ve never been able to break thru and just do that so far, and I’m 39. I’ve been stuck in the “work for someone else” thing, using a frac­tion of my talents indi­rectly, for a long time. Still wor­king on brea­king out… cros­sing my fin­gers (and soc­king cash in the bank in the mean­time, a new luxury for me)!
    You’re doing great, Hugh. Peo­ple are lis­te­ning to you, appre­cia­ting what you say and being ins­pi­red by it — myself inc­lu­ded. Be plea­sed with your­self! Heh, but not TOO plea­sed… ;)

  4. I was rea­ding an article in the Wall Street Jour­nal about a woman from England who star­ted desig­ning eCards and now has an unin­ten­tio­nally thri­ving $1.7M busi­ness from her loyal fans. I sus­pect that your busi­ness card art is much bet­ter and more poig­nant.
    I bring it to your atten­tion not because your work and hers is simi­lar. Rather, maybe there is a para­llel busi­ness plan in there somewhere for you!
    From the WSJ:
    The e-card had been for­war­ded over and over, and each per­son repl­ying to Ms. Law­son wan­ted to know the same thing: Got any more cards?
    Today, 61-year-old Ms. Law­son occu­pies a cove­ted niche in the electronic-commerce world: a pro­fi­ta­ble, subscription-based Web site where she sells her highly-stylized e-cards without a blip of adver­ti­sing. Reve­nue comes solely from 300,000 mem­bers — 81% of whom are based in the U.S. and pay $8 a year. Her sales last year tota­led about $1.7 million; by year end, sales are expec­ted to jump to as much as $5 million with her typi­cal holi­day surge in new subsc­ri­bers.
    Although her small inven­tory (fewer than 50 cards) frus­tra­tes some subsc­ri­bers, the curious popu­la­rity of http://www.jacquielawson.com has put it on the radar of industry-watchers.

  5. Derek says:

    Lea­ding an inte­res­ting life is not always easy, and the occa­sio­nal close call is to be expec­ted.
    But then, who wants to live a boring life?