On Freelance Work

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On Freelance Work
On Freelance Work

There are many reasons why people don’t follow their dreams. Some of them are financial, most are about information and representation. Below, I explain the hurdles I had to overcome in order to live my dream of becoming a working writer.

Cabrillo College.

I was nineteen when I first attended Cabrillo College. I had no idea what an entrance exam was. I did not know that those tests determined how long it would take you to transfer out to a four-year college. Ill-informed and unprepared, I tested into English 100 (pre-requisite to English 1A). There are many reasons I assumed that becoming a working writer was out of my reach, and although this experience at Cabrillo was not my first reality check, it was the loudest.

On Freelance Work
On Freelance Work

You don’t know what you don’t know.

Not only was I ill-equipped at writing, but I also didn’t know what writing full time looked like; I didn’t know a single adult who wrote for a living. I pushed my childhood dream aside until I finally graduated college at 39. It was then that I went into an industry I knew nothing about. I asked questions and sent emails to contacts on websites. I applied for internships and wrote for free. I leveraged my creativity to finish a poetry manuscript I’d been sitting on for years. I reached out to friends in the media and asked if they would let me talk about my book and The Rosales Sisters’ Scholarship that it benefits. One article turned into the next, and before I knew it, I could send a cold-call email pitching an article with ease. Freelance work is now a daily habit.

Two Years In.

Two years in, and I can say, without any sense of irony or intentional cliche, none of this has felt like work. 

In January of 2022, I wrote several articles. The National Association of Hispanic Journalists picked up the last one- becoming my first national byline. Also, in January, San Francisco Bay Area Moms, where I have been writing for a year, offered me the Managing Editor position. 

Finally. I’m on my way.

____

42 is looking good! Instead of champagne and roses, I’m asking for donations to the Rosales Sisters’ Scholarship. This weekend last year, we raised $2k alone; let’s do it again!

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Olga Rosales Salinas is Managing Editor for San Francisco Bay Area Moms. As a freelance writer and journalist, her articles have been published nationally by Palabra, National Association of Hispanic Journalists. Her debut collection of poetry and prose, La Llorona, was published by Birch Bench Press in August of 2021. Her monthly column "Thriving While Anxious" is featured @ Jumble & Flow. In 2019 her philanthropy and activism began with a non-profit benefiting first-generation and immigrant students, The Rosales Sisters' Scholarship. She has had spotlights in the following podcasts and radio stations; Los Sotelos Podcast, The Hive Poetry Collective @ksqd.org, Walk the Talk Podcast, "Making a Difference with Sheetal Ohri" on Bolly 92.3 FM, and Roll Over Easy @BFFdotFM Radio.

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