Adjusting To Being A Full-Time Author – Part 1

I've had a number of folks ask me about my experiences in transitioning from a career day job to working as a full-time author, so I thought I'd give you some of my impressions here, for what they may be worth. I'm breaking this up into four parts and this, of course, is part 1.


Now, keep in mind that I'm speaking from the perspective of a self-published author who's now supporting his family entirely on those royalties. So some things may apply more or less to you, depending on your situation (e.g., you have a second income, etc.).


As a quick recap, I was a career government employee working for the National Security Agency (NSA) for twenty-five years, and was a GG-15 (the highest grade on the regular pay scale) when I decided to leap into writing full-time after SEASON OF THE HARVEST was published in February 2011. That was literally the turning point for me, because sales of that book took off and took my previously published books with it. The money that I made during the summer of 2011 from my book royalties convinced me that I'd be an idiot not to pursue it full-time, and so I resigned from NSA in mid-August.


Six months have passed since then, which actually comes as a bit of a shock: it seems like I just left work yesterday! Anyway, here are some impressions I'd like to pass on in hopes they may help someone else down the line who's at the threshold of taking this particular leap of faith.


Health Insurance Coverage


You probably weren't expecting this, were you? The reason I wanted to talk about this is that it was a huge issue for us in transitioning from a federal plan to a "regular" health plan, because it's something I don't believe people should be without (the FUBAR'd health care system notwithstanding), but depending on your situation, this is a potential show-stopper for becoming self-employed.


At NSA, I was covered by one of the federal government plans (the same as our friendly neighborhood congress-persons have). We paid about $400 a month for family coverage, while Uncle Sam (through your generous tax donations) paid another $800, for a total of right around $1200 a month for a state Blue Cross HMO. We had copays of $20 or so for office visits and whatever the formulary cost was for prescriptions (which were generally very cheap), and that was it – no deductible, no coinsurance. It didn't matter if we went to the doc for a sniffle or if I needed a brain transplant, and there were all sorts of other bells and whistles. In short, for $400 a month and a few twenties now and again, our family didn't have to worry at all about health care coverage. Best of all, the providers couldn't drop us, screw us over on preexisting conditions (if we'd had any) or jack up our rates. They can't do that for people covered under a federal plan. Sweet.


When my wife and I started seriously looking at me leaving NSA, I had to research alternative health care plans, the kind that "regular people" not working for the fed have. Holy crap. All I can say is that anyone who says we don't need massive health care reform in this country is certifiably insane. I'm not making a political statement, just stating a fact.


After weeding through all the bazillion different plan options, which on the surface give the impression of offering choice, but compared to what I was used to only differed in the degree to which I was going to get screwed, I finally settled on one that had a premium of $600 a month and had a $2700 per person ($5400 family) annual deductible and no coinsurance. Just to compare those two, our federal plan cost us maybe a total of $5,000 a year for everything. Just the premium on the new plan is over $7000, and we could get stiffed over $12,000 if we had enough to eat up the family deductible. Yummy.


Of course, the insurance company didn't want to cover me for 10 months for something they deemed was a preexisting condition, even though it hadn't been an issue for over two years. So I had to sign a waiver for that, stating that the insurer wasn't responsible for anything related to that condition for 10 months. Anything for that had to come out of my own pocket. Nice. Then, of course, they can later on "reevaluate" our coverage and raise our rates, etc. Welcome to the Matrix.


So, health care is a huge potential cost that you may or may not already have in your financial calculus. If you have a serious condition, you simply may not be able to afford insurance on your own.


Next up: Keep The Faith, But Don't Count On Next Month's Income…


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Published on January 27, 2012 05:45
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message 1: by Christine (new)

Christine The health insurance business is a scary world once you enter the private sector. Jeff had fantastic coverage as a City employee. We basically had "two" plans for just under $400 a month...the regular coverage and union coverage although his agency wasn't unionized.

Now that he's in the private sector, we pay about $600 a month with the same copays but a smaller family deductible. However my epidurals, if done at the hospital as usual, will now have a deductible of $700! It's a far cry from the $200 I used to pay a year for that. On the bright side though, my one medication that has no generic form will now only cost me $25 instead of $150 a month :-)


message 2: by [deleted user] (new)

Man, you're making me glad I love in Canada all of a sudden. Wow. Thanks for a different take on this subject. I just switched to writing full-time November 1, so I'm looking forward to your next post.


message 3: by Michael (new)

Michael Robert - Yeah, it's truly criminal. While it may sound melodramatic, the health insurance industry literally sentences who knows how many thousands of people a year to death by canceling their policies or making coverage so expensive that people can't afford to pay it, anyway. And in many cases those who do have a policy have a deductible (on top of the already high monthly premiums) that's so high they can't afford to use it except in emergencies. Health insurance coverage for a growing number of folks is as much or more than their mortgage payments!

It's disgusting and abominable, and if members of Congress were restricted only to publicly available health plans, rather than the ones they enjoy from the federal government, we'd see a health care revolution here overnight... :-(


message 4: by [deleted user] (new)

Agreed! When members of congress say, "You don't want this," then why don't they give it up? They reject a national plan for civilians that serves the military pretty well overall. When you wrote that your family premium was now $600 a month (with that incredibly high deductible!) I felt a stone fall into my gut.

The numbers expose the lie that people "choosing" to go without health insurance are irresponsible. Most are just choosing food, shelter and clothing first. I'm glad you escaped to write full-time, but reading your numbers breakdown? Wow.

To put it in a Canadian context, we wouldn't step inside US borders for a single day without loading up on travel/health insurance. We'd think that a crazy financial risk. Every day, despite some improvements,many Americans take that risk and I feel anxious just writing about it.


message 5: by Michael (new)

Michael Yes, it's all a stinking crock of poo. I think it's terribly ironic that our nation, what most Americans believe (or would like to believe) is the greatest in the world, stands at #37 on the World Health Organization's ranking of health care systems as of 2000, and I doubt we've climbed any higher. Wow. We're just ahead of Slovenia.

The damnable thing about it is that there doesn't seem to be a way of breaking the logjam without really upsetting everything else in the apple cart. Special interest groups and their huge campaign contributions own Congress (both parties) and the presidency (and through the presidency, the Supreme Court, depending on which justices may be retiring in any given administration), and anyone who gets into office and tries to effect meaningful change is vilified by his or her peers and sees their reelection campaign money disappear. The only real exception is an incumbent president, who's pretty much a "given choice" for his or her party (note: only Democratic or Republican).

No third party has a chance at breaking the deadlock because of our plurality voting system, which is highly biased toward two-party systems.

Grr. I need to continue this rant on http://rebootsociety.org! LOL!


message 6: by [deleted user] (new)

Thought you'd like this: https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fb...


message 7: by Michael (new)

Michael Yep, that sort of sums it up, doesn't it?


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