MG Mason

Downside of Freelancing: Illness

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You wake up one morning and you have a bit of a headache, maybe a sore throat too. You didn’t sleep all that well and when you stand up you feel nauseous – maybe you are sick. You go to work anyway and by lunchtime, you have a nasty cough, a terrible fever. All you want to mdo is curl up into a ball and go to sleep. You get sent home and spend the rest of the day in bed – maybe somebody else will finish that particular task.

It’s all nice and cosy when you work for somebody; in most cases, you’re entitled to some degree of sick pay (at least, you are here in the EU – I can’t speak for our American cousins) and some businesses will let you have the day off with full pay if you’re only off for a day or two. Now, I don’t do the Man Flu thing and I would rather soldier on and be sent home than to ask to be sent home. I often feel I’m not ill enough unless somebody else notices that I look like sh*t.

There’s a particularly nasty bug going around at the moment. I am just getting over it and sadly, my partner now seems to have picked it up. I hope it wasn’t me who gave it to her, she seems to have picked it up very quickly from me so it’s likely she got it from somebody at work – but her symptoms seem identical to mine either way.

Of course, I’ve been ill since becoming self-employed, but so far not ill enough that I’ve struggled to sleep, struggled to stay awake, struggled to concentrate, have a constant dry cough, a constant headache brought on by violent coughing, persistent violent sneezing with blood in the tissue and so on. Though you will have nobody trying to guilt you into the office when you work for yourself, one of the disadvantages of working for yourself is that the work will wait for you – there’s never going to be somebody to do it for you and if you don’t do the work you don’t get paid. If you really are too ill to work from the comfort of your warm and cosy bed, here is what I recommend you should do.

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