Note to self: Accounting should be a part of daily life

www.inkthinkerblog.com — All year I’ve been putting off entering my business expenses into my QuickBooks because I got it in my head that it would be “too haaaaaarrrrrd” (pronounce that with about six syllables to get the full effect). Since I’m looking at buying property, my mortgage guy needs a P&L from me demonstrating that I’m not a huge self-employed risk, which, having not entered any of my expenses into my QuickBooks all year, I don’t have.

Flash back to this weekend, when my QuickBooks program informed me that it was taking its ball and going home because it doesn’t like Internet Explorer 7.0. Fantastic.

Flash forward again to this morning, when a nice QuickBooks account manager named Peter talked me into shelling out $400 on QuickBooks 2007 Premium, which I can supposedly customize like there’s no tomorrow to accommodate the “consultative” nature of my business. (It’ll be here on Friday, so I’ll let you know.)

So anyway, it occurred to me that if I have to learn a whole new version of QuickBooks, I’d better make sure all of my info is entered correctly in the current version so it all transfers properly, yadda, yadda, yadda, and hey, maybe I should figure out that expense-recording thing. Out comes the overflowing oaktag “2006 KKF Expenses” folder (aside: Am I the only person on the planet who doesn’t call them manila folders? What’s up with that?) with its plethora of teeny, tiny, unreadable scraps of paper, crumpled receipts, and cryptic notations. And WHY didn’t I start doing this in like January? Two hours later…

…I’m astonished at how much this business is costing me, and I’m not even talking about the physical and emotional expense (ba-dum-ching!). Like seriously, how did I spend this much money on business supplies? Last year I bought a laptop and a desk and a huge bookshelf, so I was expecting a lot of expenses. This year, however, I bought a printer and a new desk chair and that’s about it. Except for the eighty-five bajillion other things! Professional organization memberships, conferences, transportation to said conferences, research materials (books, subscriptions, etc), professional development, software, business cards… It all adds up.

I can’t say definitively that I would have spent less if I’d been actively tracking it all along, but at least I wouldn’t have been quite so flabbergasted at the total! My advice to you: At the end of every day (or even every week, whatever), gather up your receipts and enter them into your record-keeping system of choice. Don’t let yourself be surprised. It’s not fun.

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www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

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An imposter!

www.inkthinkerblog.com — Today my phone rang around 11:30. The voice on the other end of the line was familiar, but I couldn’t for the life of me figure out why the person it sounded like would be calling me.

Me: Good morning, this is Kristen.

Guy: Uh, hi.

Me: Hi.

Guy: I, uh, found your thing about proofreading and editing websites?

Me: Yes? How can I help you?

Guy: Well, I was wondering if you could help with mine.

Me: Okay, well I’m in front of the computer right now, so do you know the address off the top of your head? I can pull it up right now.

Guy: Sure. It’s w-w-w-dot-andy–

Me: (screaming) It IS you!!!!!!!

Andy: (cracking up)

Talk about a blast from the past! I’ve been friends with this guy since I was like 5 (I’m not kidding–kindergarten through 12th grade in the same class!), but we lost touch in 2003-ish. I ran into his brother at the poetry festival and asked him to pass along my info, so I guess he did! Long story short, my friend is married and has a baby on the way, and I’m looking forward to meeting wife and baby in March when I go home for a wedding. Talk about a blast from the past. This kid and I used to be on the lit mag together in high school. Awesome.

And he totally had me going there, too.

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www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

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One box and one pile to go

www.inkthinkerblog.com — I can’t believe the office is almost completely organized. This is astonishing. I had a goal of going through two file cabinet drawers a week, and I managed to knock out both the bookshelf and the file cabinet in one fell swoop. Well, one fell swoop and a half, if you count this morning’s finishing touches. I’m feeling proud…

Here’s what’s on the plate for today:
– complete that final box and pile
– finish handouts for the WIW Freelance Success Seminar this Saturday
– finish nonfiction proposal editing
– make a dent in the 4 medical articles and 7 medical chapters sitting on my desk right now
– do my homework for tonight’s class (almost done–finally! longest. semester. ever.)
– walk with the Pickler

What’s going on for you today?

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www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

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“Summer reading list”

www.inkthinkerblog.com — I’m trying to get rid of as much paper as possible, so here’s a list I’ve been moving around for about 2 years and am ready to just throw out finally (but of course I can’t part with the info!):

Summer Reading List

The Idiot Dostoevsky
The Women of Brewster Place Gloria Naylor
The Importance of Being Earnest Oscar Wilde
The Way of All Flesh Samuel Butler
A Room With a View E.M. Forster
Where Angels Fear to Tread E.M. Forster
Mr. Noon D.H. Lawrence
Anna Karenina Tolstoy
Dead Souls Gogol
Bella-Vista Colette
One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel Garcia Marquez
The Bone People Keri Hulme
A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man James Joyce
Waiting for Godot Samuel Beckett
Letters to a Young Poet Rilke
Song of Solomon Morrison
The Book of Nightmares Galway Kinnell
Invisible Man Ralph Ellison
In Love and Trouble Alice Walker
Turn of the Screw Henry James
Jude the Obscure Thomas Hardy
Tess of the D’Urbervilles Thomas Hardy
Aunt Julia and the Scriptwriter Mario Vargas Llosa
Hamlet Shakespeare
Eight Great Tragedies Barnet, Berman, Burto (eds)

I’m embarrassed at how few of these I’ve actually read! Note to self: Start reading books that have been published already instead of just those that need editing before publication.

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

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This organization thing is getting old

www.inkthinkerblog.com — I literally spend the WHOLE DAY today taking everything off my bookshelf, sorting through it, throwing out about half (I can’t believe how much was left after the famous magazine disposal of last month!), and putting it all back, which of course led to a re-evaluation of the file cabinet situation, which required me to sift through the overflowing inboxes on my desk (you know, the ones I’ve been pretending not to see)… It just kept going! Long story short, I’ve got about 100 more magazines on their way to the recycling center and three bags of trash heading downstairs momentarily. Byt hey, at least I found my missing-for-a-good-six-weeks address labels!

__________________________________________
www.kristenkingfreelancing.com
Finalist in 2006 Writer’s Digest Best Writer’s Website Contest

Contents Copyright © 2006-2014 Kristen King

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