About 25 years ago, a magazine I worked for shut down abruptly and I drifted into freelancing. Aside from a few brief stints in “proper jobs”, I’ve been self-employed ever since. I love the freedom and variety. You never entirely get used to the instability.
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As a freelancer, you’re rarely dumped outright. Instead, you’re left hanging. Work that once arrived regularly, sometimes for years, simply stops. No explanation. No ceremony. Institutions move on. New faces, new ideas. People fall through the gaps.
You learn not to take it personally. You keep moving. But that doesn’t mean it doesn’t sting. Even if it was a job you didn’t particularly love.
Last year I was offered some ad-hoc broadcasting work. It came out of the blue. It wasn’t something I’d pursued, but it paid, it sounded fun, and I had the time. So I did it for a few months. Then it stopped. No explanation. None required. Work is transactional.
Its disappearance made no material difference to my life. The money was negligible and it wasn’t central to my broader ambitions. But I’d enjoyed it. It had been pleasant to be asked. And when it faded away, I felt oddly bruised.
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It’s not easy to admit that at my age. I’ve had a long career with bigger knockbacks than this. I once believed I’d developed skin so thick that nothing could touch me. Crying into your cornflakes over minor career hiccups was for amateurs.
I now realise that was just a story. Experience builds resilience, but it doesn’t erase the basic human desire to feel wanted. I liked being chosen. And I felt it, however mildly, when I wasn’t.
Perhaps it’s ego. Or perhaps it’s older echoes: feeling left out in the playground, getting knocked back at the disco. The specifics change; the feeling doesn’t.
I imagine something similar can happen with love. You can split from someone for all the right reasons, forget them for years, then hear an old song and feel a flicker of something: not devastation, just a reminder that once you were chosen by each other.
Maybe that’s the song I should write: not about heartbreak, but about the faint sting of no longer being selected. Though I suspect even Chris Difford might struggle to craft a hit from the loss of a modestly paid broadcasting contract.
Sam Delaney’s book Stop Sh**ting Yourself: 15 Life Lessons That Might Help You Calm the F*ck Down is out now (Little, Brown, £22) and is available from the Big Issue shop on bookshop.org, which helps to support Big Issue and independent bookshops.
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