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Treat it like a hol for a few weeks then gradually start to implement plan Bs and do some dev projects to keep you sharp and add strings to your bow.
Just as you start to get into this you can guarantee that a gig will come along and you'll never finish it.
I wish, have spent some time skilling up, having look at what contracts are out there and what skills are needed, only to find as soon as my course is finished the roles for that particular skill set seem to have disappeared.
It's a conspiracy I tell you
I've learnt to accept that the market is what is is and enjoy the time off.
normally do 9 months a year, this has turned into 6 months, am on my last months salary and dividend (that is until the accountant confirms, how much copr tax i actually have to pay, and then i'm good for another couple of months)
I could survive by working for only six months a year, but having been a spendthrift in my younger days, my retirement funds aren't very beefy (and now getting worse, thanks Gordon), so in the long term I can't afford to.
The "live for today" mentality only lasts until you wake up tomorrow.
At a stretch I could live off 3 months a year working.
In four months contracting, I bill more than my last permie job paid me in a year.
Since contracting, we've not really increased the amount that we spend much, so it's no problem. I've also got enough in the company to be out of work for two years before it might start to bite.
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