When I became a freelance writer nearly a decade ago, I assumed the uncertainty would eventually fade. I imagined there would come a point where I’d built enough relationships, landed enough recurring clients, and published enough work that I’d finally feel secure.
But that moment never really came.
Today, I make a stable living as a freelance health and fitness writer. I write for major publications, have long-term editorial relationships, and often have more work than I can realistically take on. On paper, my career looks stable.
And yet, I still approach my work as if I were trying to land my next job.
Part of that is practicality. Freelancing teaches you quickly that stability is often temporary. Editors leave. Budgets shrink. Publications pivot. Consistent work can disappear overnight. I’ve had stretches where everything felt solid, only to lose multiple clients within weeks through no fault of my own.
Once you experience that a few times, it permanently changes the way you think and approach your work.
The mindset never fully turns off
Even during busy periods, part of my brain is always scanning for what’s next. I’m pitching editors, maintaining relationships, updating lists of ideas, and paying attention to industry shifts.
The rise of AI has intensified that feeling over the last few years. As someone who writes for a living, I’ve had to adapt quickly, learn new tools, and think carefully about what still makes human-driven writing valuable.
From the outside, freelancing can look flexible and relaxed. And in many ways, it is. It allows me to drop off and pick up my kids from school, coach their soccer teams, and handle daily life in a way a traditional job likely wouldn’t.
But mentally, I rarely feel fully “off.” There’s always a low-level awareness that I should be working and that if I stop pushing for too long, opportunities could dry up.
The stress doesn’t disappear when things are going well
One of the strangest things about freelancing is that external success doesn’t automatically create internal security.
I still feel anxious when I send a pitch email or submit a story draft. I still overanalyze unanswered messages. I still wonder, occasionally, whether the work will eventually dry up despite years of evidence suggesting otherwise. And I still regularly deal with imposter syndrome.
Some of that is probably tied to my personality. But I also think many freelancers quietly carry this same low-grade uncertainty, especially those of us supporting families.
I’m 39 years old now. I have a wife, two kids, a mortgage, and responsibilities that feel very real every month. There’s no corporate structure absorbing the risk for me. If work slows down, I feel it directly. That pressure has made me more disciplined, proactive, and resilient. But it’s also made it difficult to completely relax professionally, even during good periods.
It’s become part of my identity
At this point, I’m not sure I could fully shut off the “feast or famine” mindset even if I wanted to. Freelancing has conditioned me to constantly adapt, reinvent myself, and prepare for change.
In some ways, I think that’s kept me sharp. I’m always learning new skills, studying trends, and thinking about how to evolve. One day, I’m interviewing a researcher about blood sugar regulation; the next, I’m writing about fitness trends or trying to understand how AI might reshape media over the next decade. That constant motion can be exhausting. But it can also feel energizing.
The trade-off I’ve accepted
There are days when I envy people like my wife, who have clearly defined careers, predictable paychecks, and the ability to leave work at work. That kind of work stability sounds incredibly appealing.
But freelancing has also given me things I’m not willing to give up: flexibility, autonomy, and the ability to shape my life around my family instead of structuring my family around work.
The uncertainty is the price I pay for that freedom.
I still approach my career like I’m job hunting because, in some ways, I always am. Not out of desperation, but because freelancing requires you to stay engaged, visible, and adaptable at all times. At some point, I stopped seeing that mindset as a temporary phase and started recognizing it as part of the job itself, which has been both relieving and nerve-racking.