>>16086821>How old were you when you bought the shed?I left my college institution of Arkansas State University when I was 22, and then moved back home with my parents for a month or so.
I struggled with depression, as where I was raised, living with your mother and father makes you an absolute failure as a human being. Within a few months, I bought a car from my writing (saving every penny), and proceeded to move on from home much to their complaint.
My parents loved me, and they would take care of me if necessary, but that would only result in me fulfilling my self-promise that, if I was incapable of self-sufficiency, I would end my own life.
I worked for a few more months as a writer on varied freelancing sites for companies out of Florida using my laptop to produce works for their websites and SEO, then discovered many alternative-living experts online that inspired me to do more.
So, I saved more, more; survived the summer in a car and camping in the forests of MO near Current River and sometimes in Mountain View Arkansas's sites, then attended some bidding wars for land. That's when I got my own.
I believe I was 23?
>How much would you say your freelance writing pulls in per year and what do you write about?It probably pulls in, at most, $20,000 a year because I only work enough to save a few thousand-per for emergencies. I'm a contract writer.
>How long you been shed-living?Three years.
>What does a typical day look like? A routine?I don't really have routines, I just do what I feel like each day. If that's laying about and napping, or spending a day reading about the Civil War, or anything else... Just depends.
>Any pets?No, not really. I've been thinking about chickens but I'd need a good dog to guard them.
>What have been the best and worst things about shed-living?I mean, my building isn't exactly pretty I suppose? Sometimes I have to do repairs, and setting up a bath sucks. Sometimes I'll just swim in the river to bathe.