I TAKE SURVEYS,,,BELONG TO 243 SURVEY COMPANYS AND DO PRETY GOOD AT THEM ,SOME ARE VERY REWARDING AND SOPME AREN,T...LAST YUR. COLLECTED OVER 1100 $ IN SURVEY MONEY..
I take care of my Granddaughter part time. I've done this for almost 10 years with my Grandsons too. Although I use to do "pay" positions for Childcare, can't put a price on love...
I am a virtual on line assistant. I have worked for the same company for about 5 years. I love it. I can work anywhere. I have worked from libraries when I travel. I have a wireless card so as long as I can get a signal I can pretty much work.
Yes, I realize how very very very lucky I am.
i work in an office. but when the weather is bad, i can stay home and work from there. i just forward the phone, and log into the computer here, and whala, i am working.
i do wish i could just do the whole farm thing and never leave home, but alas, the kids still need shoes.
NO CANT SAY I DO...........
This is something I would enjoy doing. I resigned from a good office job 5 years ago to help take care of parent health issues. Now with the economy and job situation - I'm not sure what I can be doing now.
posted by joy333
over 2 years ago
I have worked from my home office way before it became "fashionable". I get so much more accomplished. My husband is semi-retired, recently started working from home. I am a RE/MAX broker and he is an attorney. We are so excited because he starts Medicare in February! Can't wait to drop him from our health insurance. I'm getting into all these senior "perks" & discounts! LOVE IT. PM7
I have worked at home as a medical transcriptionist for 15 years. I also started a part-time pet-sitting business which I can do at home or in my client's home, but no boss standing over me, it is great.
yes I do have a home business.We are Herbalife Distributors and have been
in the business for over 16 years.The great thing about working from home is you can work when you want to and play when you want to.Life is wonderful.
I telecommute as a technical and marketing writer for a manufacturer in another state.
Pros: I can work in my jammies. No commute.
Cons: It's hard to stay "in the loop"; I get left out of a lot of decision making processes and new information because I'm not physically there. And I miss out on all the socializing that work usually brings, from sitting down with my boss for a cup of coffee to the Christmas party.
It's a trade off in many ways, but I'm lucky to have a job.