- Home
- slideshows
- miscellaneous
- My husband and I are both freelancers with unpredictable incomes. Two years ago, we moved to an island off the coast of Seattle - here's what a week of our typical spending looks like.
My husband and I are both freelancers with unpredictable incomes. Two years ago, we moved to an island off the coast of Seattle - here's what a week of our typical spending looks like.
Wednesday, July 24 total: $37.14
Thursday total: $32.92
Orcas Island doesn't have any big-box or chain stores. You go to "America" for that, as locals call the mainland, and Amazon Prime is our great friend. We're learning how to do more for ourselves, like canning our own fruit, pickles and preserves, making our own liqueurs and pastries — and routine auto maintenance. After several months of unanswered messages left with the island's overbooked auto repair shop, I finally gave up and ordered new wiper blades for my Miata ($20.62). (Prime "overnight" shipping here means Thursday-to-Tuesday, by the way.)
We're good cooks who don't eat out much — avoiding calories and poverty both. But that evening, E. treated us to an amazing dinner at The Loft ($0.00, for us). Afterward, we drove to West Beach to watch the sunset, a rare event in the high Arctic. I bought a glass of wine ($8.30). Mark bought an ice cream cone ($4). E. took photos to show friends back home what sunset looks like.
Friday total: $235.36
While E. and I hiked up Turtleback Mountain, Mark stayed home and fought with his website provider about why his third serial episode this month violated his plan's five-mailings-per-month limit. Their solution? Upgrade to a 20-mailings-per-month plan ($136.54) to send out that third episode. (New math?)
After our hike, E. and I had ice cream ($7.57), and brought some home to cheer Mark up ($3.78).
Later, we drove E. to the island's tiny airport and put her on a tiny plane, then took ourselves to dinner at The Kitchen ($50.47). Next we bought Mark some vitamin E oil at the pharmacy. He tried to cut his index finger off with a cheese grater a few weeks ago. Seven stitches. E oil's supposed to help that. Then we saw a movie, "Toy Story 4, ($28.00)" where I also bought a glass of wine ($9).
Saturday total: $27.85
Some good friends were moving stuff out of their just-sold bed and breakfast. We brought our truck to lend a hand, and they bought lunch at the Lower Tavern ($0.00, for us). This was not a weight-loss week.
Then back to the grocery store for a few essentials — ice cream, tomatoes, broccoli ($27.85).
After that, we went home and worked (there is no such word as "weekend" in freelancer-land) until dinner — at home, for once — before watching "Good Omens" on Amazon Prime. We don't have — or want — cable or satellite TV, but we do splurge on Netflix as well.
Sunday total: $19.26
Our friends are still running their just-sold B&B through the end of the month, and they've hired me to clean and remake rooms for a few days — as freelance editors do from time to time. When I got home from turning beds and scrubbing toilets, I placed another Amazon Prime order, for body lotion ($19.26), and worked all afternoon until dinner — at home again!
Monday total: $219.12
I went online and paid the final installment, interest, and penalties of our payment plan to the IRS for that overdue 2018 tax surprise ($1,082.37). It feels good to have this paid off! Now to start on this year's taxes …
Mark ordered some desperately needed tulip bulbs online ($46.16), and I paid the pest control bill ($172.96, which included the $50 setup + $110 quarterly fee + tax).
Then — you guessed it — we worked all day and had dinner at home.
Tuesday total: $113.05
We have an out-of-state friend who lives on government assistance and barely scrapes by, so every month we put some money ($40) in an account he can access. After doing that at the bank, Mark went to the grocery store for milk, half and half, grapefruit juice, artichoke hearts, breakfast cereal, more amazing Rainier cherries, blueberries, Galia melon, a mango, and some lettuce, plus a $0.25 bag because we keep forgetting to put that dang canvas tote in the car ($49.00).
My wiper blades arrived; I haven't worked out how to put them on my car yet. I'm almost certain it'll be easy-peasy, and I won't regret trying to do it myself. Almost …
We walked back down to West Beach to enjoy another sunset over a dinner of hot dogs, a glass of wine, and a Lopez Ice Cream milkshake ($24.05), and called my dad and stepmom to wish her a happy birthday. Then we walked back home, 30 minutes up the hill, and excellent exercise!
We love our island life. Its high cost of living and sparse amenities are a small price to pay for such inspiring peace and beauty every day. Our home is a serene oasis (even accounting for wasps, rats, ravenous deer, raccoons herons, owls, and river otters … ) in which to create and live. We will figure out how to get our finances on a more stable basis; we have several layers of plans. Mark's serial is building an audience, and my writing — both fiction and nonfiction — is gaining traction as well. In addition, my editing business is booming, and my biggest client just decided to raise their freelancer rates by 25% — without my even asking for it!
The world might be scary and so many things are uncertain, but I think we're going to be all right.
At least we're where we most want to be. And we have each other.
Shannon Page is an author and editor on Orcas Island who has published dozens of short stories. Novels include "Our Lady of the Islands" (with Jay Lake), a Publishers Weekly Best Book of 2014; "Eel River"; "The Queen and The Tower," and (with Karen Berry) "Orcas Intrigue" and "Orcas Intruder."
Popular Right Now
Popular Keywords
Advertisement