Hi Misty,
Exhaustion is not good for anyone. I hope you and your husband are able to have time to rest and recuperate. If you can make it a prayed about and talked about decision on a rested body and mind, that would be so wonderful.
I work two different jobs outside of taking care of the home and handling the brunt of our kids’ education. The first is as an independent rep for Barefoot Books. I’ve been doing this for over eight years and work part-time hours to earn a part-time income. I started it to replace a part-time job I had waitressing outside of the home that I did not enjoy. Since I knew exactly how much money I needed to make, I was able to plan my goals and hours accordingly. Since it is my own small business, it took a minimal investment and about four months to consistently earn just what I needed. I surpassed my monetary goal in about a year. No matter what anyone says in a direct sales type of business, it is work. I put in the hours and basically reap what I sow. I am able to run book fairs and community fundraisers with my children at my side and they have basically grown up with the business. I choose the books from their line that I want to represent and run my business to suit our needs.
My other job is based on the new “shared economy.” We rent our barn out on Airbnb and I take care of the guests from May-October (it is a seasonal rental). We may be adding our camper for overnight rental this May as well. It means I handle the reservation requests, cleaning of the space, changing linens, giving directions, fixing breakfasts, etc. Airbnb handles the money aspect, for which I am thankful. Our friends rent out one bedroom in their home and introduced us to the concept.
Schooling: With the Barefoot business, I school 9-2 and then work Barefoot from 2-4 to mainly answer questions from team members and take part in trainings, new product presentations, etc.. Since I am working with other stay at home moms, I need to be flexible. Sometimes they can only take a phone call after 9pm when the littles are sound asleep. I don’t work the 2-4 if I have a book fair and then may work 2-3 days in a row or a weekend at a community event or just an evening where I bring the bookstore to someone’s home. I incorporate the kids as much as I am able. If it’s a community event, they make recommendations, stamp little bare feet on kids’ hands, help pack up, put stickers on catalogs, arrange books, etc.
When the barn is open for the season, we might not have people checking out until noon. This meant we had to be hugely flexible. The wonderful thing was that we had people visiting us from all over the world and they were so interesting. We all got a huge education in magnanimity and a myriad of different topics. For example, we had a diplomat from the Marshall Islands, a Grean Peace worker, a furniture designer delivering a custom bench to an art museum, a judge from North Carolina, a British Museum educator, MIT graduates and a physics professor. We had guests from Spain, Italy, Egypt, England and Germany. Over breakfast they would tell us about their lives, show us videos of their work, and share photographs. We even had musicians give an impromptu concert in our living room. It was such an education that I had to learn to be okay if our formal lessons didn’t start until after lunch that day.
It sounds romantic and it definitely has its very real upside. We rent our barn for $85 a night to guests. It is enjoyable but hard work though and from May to October the only free weekend I had were the days we blocked off for our yearly camping trip. When the end of October came I was tired. If you can imagine the heightened awareness you have when you have guests in your home, it was that kind of feeling for months on end. We love to offer hospitality though and have guests in our home more often than not so this fit our lifestyle quite well.
So, that is a peek into my life as a homeschooling work at home mom. I look forward to hearing from others along with you.
Warmly,
Richele