No problem. You wouldn't trade your life for mine; I wouldn't trade mine for yours. 'Take what you want, and pay for it, saieth the Lord' (Anyone know where that comes from, incidentally? Someone said they thought it might be Spanish). Erie is doing exactly that, and the very best of luck to him. The people who piss me off are the ones who say to me, "Oh, I wish I could do what you do," but also want the standard of living, pension, security, etc., that you enjoy. They know what they want to take but won't pay for it.
Cheers,
Roger
Roger--well I actually have a similar philosophy to Erie's. I have always been that way, so I never really desired to make more money than I could live on and be happy doing what I wanted to do.
The tradeoffs in the job--well my benefits now are pretty good compared to the outside world and the downsizing etc. I have a retirement plan, major medical health & I can cover my family on that as well, I get paid sick leave and vacation leave. I also get longevity pay. I get cars, travel per diem expenses, all equipment supplied, all insurance liability covered, etc. It's just working for someone else who not only owns everything, but they own everything you produce as well--this is often what turns photographers away though, work-for-hire is not seen as a perk for many creative people, until they reach a point in their lives where maybe they want health insurance or a steady paycheck. I never started from the other vantage point though. I wanted that from the very beginning.
I'm at the halfway point more or less. I can take retirement in about ten years. I'll be 50 then. My retirement plan is to become a photographer like the rest of you.
I enjoy the work, but it's changing, and I have changed with it. I still enjoy it, though, because unlike some, I don't have issues with digital imaging. I see things as being fluid, always moving, and I learned to let go a bit , because it will drive you crazy if you try to control things too much, since you can't actually do that. everything changes, nothing really lasts, or stays the same. so it's very similar to what I read in Erie's post. I think it's like Joseph Cambell I think, who said "follow your bliss". that works for me.
I don't think that I have very good advice though to give to students or people wanting to get into the industry--because this outlook, is not what it being taught in the business type schools or in the professional organizations either. The interns we have had, they didn't want any part of it. They were uninterested in the work. This is pretty much why we quit taking interns, because we were tired of dealing with them. It just creates more work for us, because they don't want to do the jobs that photographers have to do. I don't know why, or what it is they teach people now in photo programs, but it's vastly different than it was when I came up, which was like a caste system of assisting. now everyone wants to start at the top, only that work at the bottom still needs to get done. these jobs I describe--they're all the parts of photography as a business folded into one. You do all the work from the top to the bottom. They don't teach this stuff in photo schools, whether it's a BFA or an AAS. You learn on the job. I don't know anyway else to say that, but if the people trying to get into the business aren't enthused about even the little things like that, then what can you tell them as advice? there's more to it than studying "business".
so I offer up all that as advice I guess, but I think it's quite different than the rest of you all here.