Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand these billing rates. When the OP says she’s earning $625/hour, is that actually $625 x 40 hours x 50 weeks = $1.25 million per year? Because if so, then obviously she should be outsourcing everything and living a great life.
If on the other hand, she spends a significant amount of time marketing herself, submitting proposals, doing other business nonsense, and only actually bills 15 hours a week, then the situation is quite different. She still makes a good living but can’t outsource everything to the same degree.
OP here. I don't need to spend any time on marketing and "business proposals", only on managing my two employees. However, I work part-time 9 am - 3 pm (minus lunch), with school vacations off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand these billing rates. When the OP says she’s earning $625/hour, is that actually $625 x 40 hours x 50 weeks = $1.25 million per year? Because if so, then obviously she should be outsourcing everything and living a great life.
If on the other hand, she spends a significant amount of time marketing herself, submitting proposals, doing other business nonsense, and only actually bills 15 hours a week, then the situation is quite different. She still makes a good living but can’t outsource everything to the same degree.
OP here. I don't need to spend any time on marketing and "business proposals", only on managing my two employees. However, I work part-time 9 am - 3 pm (minus lunch), with school vacations off.
Anonymous wrote:Cooking at home is cheaper, but only if you buy cheaper ingredients obviously. So no big steaks, expensive seafood, out of season organic veggies... With regular ingredients you can easily eat for under $15/family per meal with planning. At a restaurant that is $50+. As far as time, I work too and I never make weekday meals that take over 30 minutes of active time. Getting in the car and going out, waiting at restaurant would take much longer, and delivery services cost extra.
Anonymous wrote:1. You raised a twat
2. You are lazy
3. Sodium in food out is insane
4. Your math skills suck
I make more than your hourly in half a day.
No one cares if you what to eat out
You can afford it. Still stupid
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There are so many ways to prep ahead, clean as you go, and generally make it easier for yourself. But if you are committed to not learning any of those techniques or skills and are instead convinced that cooking = making a huge mess and doing it all in the moment, then what is there to say?
For *you,* it does sound better to eat at a restaurant. For people willing to learn some basic skills, techniques, tips, and tricks, and put in some practice, it's well worth it--rewarding, satisfying, even--to cook at home.
OP here. Actually I do know how to cook. My mother taught me in my childhood in Europe, mostly French and Austrian dishes. Because she was busy working, as a teenager it was me who would cook for our family of four on a daily basis. I dare even say that I am an excellent cook. But I just do not enjoy it, and now that I am older, I tire more easily than in my youth.
I kind of doubt this because an excellent cook who has cooked her whole life would know how to create simple healthy meals. We should be asking you for advice
OP here. The French and Austrian dishes that I learned in my childhood or neither simple nor particularly healthy.
Anonymous wrote:Op spends much of her valuable $625 per hour life on DCUM. Now that’s funny.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand these billing rates. When the OP says she’s earning $625/hour, is that actually $625 x 40 hours x 50 weeks = $1.25 million per year? Because if so, then obviously she should be outsourcing everything and living a great life.
If on the other hand, she spends a significant amount of time marketing herself, submitting proposals, doing other business nonsense, and only actually bills 15 hours a week, then the situation is quite different. She still makes a good living but can’t outsource everything to the same degree.