How do I make money from home if I have chronic pain that makes it extreamly hard to do a normal job. It dosent need to be a ton of money just a bit to help out.
Make $ with Chronic Pain
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internativa.com.br
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Learn to draw
>drawing
>writting
>video editing
>Photoshoping
>growing ig accounts
>surveys
>book reviews
>growing ig accounts
Can you explain?
>Photoshopping
I am decent at this but what kind of things can I look for to get into getting paid for this
>drawing
I am doing this and have made a little. I am starting to try to make shirt designs to put on shirt a day sites and online stores but have only sold one shirt so far but hey its a start.
i would recommend you to write a lot of shitty books and publish them on amazon, develop a lot of apps with drag and drop programs like GDevelop and publish them on Google Play. It will generate a good pasive income.
Like those cheapo simple games that just run ads at the bottom? Do the people who make those really bad books on amazon really get money from them? Do people actually buy them?
This isn’t very specific but I’d suggest checking out some commissions on Fiverr, and choosing whichever opportunities you’re most skilled in
Learn2code but unironically
I will look into fiverr. Completely forgot that exsisted.
Are you getting disability benefits or medical treatment?
I'm working on it. I found a specialist but I need to get a referal to them. It is a very commonly misdiagnosed thing that can take a long time to get right. I'd rather not go on disability unless I really have to.
Meant to reply to you. My bad.
There are freelance websites for writing or coding. Buy and resell stuff on ebay and other sites. Maybe daytrading (only ever do that with disposable money)
Sell your narcotic painkillers to niggers and white trash.
bump
>chronic pain
is that what you told the welfare office to get on disability? let me guess. carpel tunnel or fibromyalgia.
...
I read some of the thread, you sound like you know a little about graphic design, the best thing you could do is:
1) learn how to design user interfaces for websites & applications. Read 2-3 books [1 week]
2) implement some user interface designs in Photoshop, make a small portfolio of 3-4 designs (phone app, booking app, health website...) [1 week]
3) learn the basics of html, css and javascript [2 weeks]
this sounds like a lot but you're just trying to learn enough to implement implement the Photoshop designs you made into code.
Eventually you'll have to learn a lot more about these 3 "programming" languages, but 99% of that won't be necessary for now.
All this should have taken you about a month. After you finish the PS designs, and start learning a little programming to implement them, do not go back to improve them, just try to transform the images into code and run them in your browser.
After this month you'll have a pretty good idea if you want to work on mobile apps, websites, or desktop applications. The most $$$ is in apps. It's a tiny bit easier to find work for websites but for much lower pay. Desktop is almost dead.
Now go to a freelancing website like 99designs / upwork or something like that. Look for what emloyers are looking for. Choose one of them and try to make it. You'll probably still feel not good enough, so maybe don't contact them. Just try to do the job for no pay to improve yourself. If you think you're good enough go ahead. If not, repeat until you're good.
Fuck I wrote a lot, I'm not even sure if you'll like the idea, but I'll be back in an hour if you have any questions concerns. Also how old are you and which country do you live in?
Thank you for the info. Do you have any book recommendations for that first step? Do you know any ideas for more art design and less coding related stuff? I've heard of flatting (doing the flat colors for comis pages/art/etc that lets the artist easliy color things) Would be a bit mind numbing but I do kinda like being able to zone out and do it. I'm having trouble finding out where to get example pages.
Also I am 25 and in the US.
>Do you have any book recommendations for that first step
I think this is the best one:
internativa.com.br
it's a bit bulky, so when you get bored look at this channel: youtube.com
It's kind of weird to just read about design so make sure to register to things like dribble, deviantart and similar websites to look at what the pros are doing.
>Do you know any ideas for more art design and less coding related stuff
Ok I know that it sounds scary to do sth you've never done before, but I'm suggesting it cuz it's the best thing out there for you. I'm 24 right now, but when I was 17-18 I started doing exactly what you're asking about - logos, icons and simple designs. I was making decent money, at least for my 3rd world country standards but there are so many issues with these kind of jobs.
- low job security for US workers, because it's easy to outsource to MUCH cheaper designers
- it's super subjective what's good and what's not so clients will ask you to rework shit all the time
- the money is generally much worse than similar jobs with a little programming
- after 10 years, you'll pretty much get paid the same
Don't get scared about the htmp, css, javascript that you have to learn. Its not some kind of algorythmic programming, you just have to tell the computer how to color and lay out your design. Think of it like writing old forum posts with and tags. It's not scary and there are a ton of resources on it. Don't dismiss it until you try it.
It's good that you're in the US, in that case it may be better to look for local jobs instead of freelance work from home jobs once you're ready. Also if you want to ask sth that you don't want to post here, I'm willing to chat later.
Now share your rarest pepe in return for the wall of text.
Here is my rarest pepe
I've only shown it to 2 people before so it is a rare one.
Thank you for the info. I will try it out and see how it goes. I do like the art stuff more which is why I was asking about it. What do you mean by local jobs instead of freelance? I'll think of some more questions to ask today and post them later if thats alright. Thanks again.
>What do you mean by local jobs instead of freelance?
I mean that the US has the highest paying software positions and as a UI designer you'll either be writing the visual part of software or helping programmers implement your design. You'll usually be part of the software team and that'll reflect in your salary.
I initially suggested freelance work from home positions as an independent contractor, because that's what I do but these jobs will pay less than a "real" job and you'll have to take care of a lot more than just doing your job.
I don't know how bad your pain is, but if you can work at an office you'll be much more productive than you'll be working from home, you'll learn and improve faster.
Thanks for the pepe, haven't seen it before. Saved for future use.
>I'll think of some more questions to ask today and post them later if thats alright
Sure I'll keep this tab open. I pretty much was in your position a while ago, except the health condition so I kinda know what you're thinking that's why I'm postin