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Feb 2024

How do you balance your work/comic lifestyle?

Sadly, we cannot make a living off our indie comics, leading many of us to get regular jobs. Some of you may even have families and larger scale responsibilities.

I've made progress due to the loss of my job. But soon I'll be heading back out to a regular job, that will in turn slow down my comic work significantly. It almost seems impossible to me, Maybe it's just me struggling to balance the two things.

How you do handle social/family life?

No doubt we need those relationships to stay healthy (Mentally), but with a job, comics, and personal needs, where is the time for a family or personal relationship?

Tips to avoid burnout from strict schedules?

Halp XD

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    Feb '24
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    Feb '24
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I own a ramen shop. And I also do YouTube editing for my husband’s Toyota truck in Japanese. Writing for me is my therapy to shut off. A personal project that does not bubble over into my life. I don’t even tell my own family what I write. This is to keep me sane and feel like I am accomplishing my own thing.

I also sleep like 4 hours.

Hello. Someone with regular jobs here, although mine is a novel. But I draw my posts, covers, and I got the gist of your question.

I work on my series after I got home, around 2/3 hours, and during lunch break. I also spend my weekends and holidays with my series. Currently I am single so I have time, but I do have to sacrifice part of socializing (since I don't have many friends and most of them are hard to meet). With these method, I can have a balanced schedule.

So my answer is: scheduling, prioritizing, and commit to it, if you have a regular job with regular worktime (like it works on a fixed schedule).

Edit: sorry, I write my reply with your post cut off.

Balancing relationship with family and friends: well I live with my family, so I meet them everyday. Most of my friends also not demanding to meet and hangout as they are also busy (just very ocassionally and some even live overseas).

Burnout: read other materials, such as references. Take breaks. Watch movies. Or just consume anything tjat even not related but make you happy.

That's great! But owning a food business was quite the experience for me ha-ha. I tried to pick up after my families failing business and It was an unreal struggle to maintain it.

Yea definitely planning ahead seems to work for most people.

BUT

Most serious comic artists and Mangaka seem to be socially Awkard people who prefer to remain hidden away inside. Maybe there's a reason for that?
Perhaps the same reason that the Starving Artist stereotype remains true?

You’ve never seen aggressive if you think that’s my aggressive side.

I want to remain hidden if I can. Alas, I have a stomach to feed.

From my own pov, I love working alone, on my ideas. Being alone enhance my creative process and I enjoy being alone. I am one that can't be disturbed while in my creative mode. If I can become full time writer/artist, I'd definitely one to get hidden and become more... socially awkward (I am already one irl, tbh)

So I'm a student, with no normal job outside of writing atm, but I tend to balance family time with work by taking time during my meals to talk to my family. My siblings are creatives too, so we do talk a lot about work stuff, but it helps us connect too. I'll sometimes text my friends as I'm doing promotion stuff back and forth too.

That being said, I do submit writing to magazines outside of my indie writing, so I tend to balance that with deadlines. Making note of what needs to be done first so that I can not miss a submission window or a deadline date. Since I'm just writing the script, and my partner is the illustrator, deadlines are less of a struggle for me. I assign myself a goal and can usually complete the script in about two days, but you really really have to prioritize making time for your story if you want to meet deadlines. It's my biggest tip. Set yourself at least an hour a day that you MUST write, and you'll be surprised how much work can be done in that time.

It's always gonna differ from person to person. The sad truth of it is that some people will not be cut out for comic making and that's ok.

One thing to keep in mind: making a comic should be considered your hobby if it's not your main way to make bread and butter. You hobbies should always be something you enjoy doing otherwise it is work and you already have a job so you don't need two of them. The moment making comics becomes a job for you rather then something you enjoy sitting down and doing for yourself you either need to stop or you need to take a vacation.

My social life is mostly d&d stuff, I'll have one night to watch movies with family and one day to take the dogs to the dog park. The rest of the time I'm either going to be at work or working on the comic.

This might not seem very flexible and it's not. Most of my friends play about 20 different games a year and I'm usually stuck playing 1 or 2 because I don't have the time for it.

I do still take breaks however. After I do a large batch of pages I'll take a weekend off. The times I take PTO off from work I usually spend the time I would have been at work playing games or hanging out with friends. I don't spend the entire of my PTO catching up on comics.

The biggest thing you need to figure out first is how much of a work flow you can manage and how quickly. Some people can only manage B&W comics. Some will do colors but it's flats, some do full on paintings for each page but they usually rarely update or they do it for a living.

Once you figure out what you can manage once a week you can figure out how to delegate your time from work- comic- social- sleep.

And remember you are more important then your comic, if working on a comic causes you to stop taking care of yourself then it might be time to take a step back and recalibrate

I have a part time job again and it sure is more difficult to manage a comic on the side XD

I just update less now. Would love to update more but there is just 24 hours in the day and I need to maintain my health.

I am currently working as a 2D graphic designer and animator, learning 3D animation and composition during my free time at work from Sunday to Thursday. After work, I do my comics for 4 hours every Sunday to Thursday, and as my day-offs(Friday-Saturday), I spend whatever hours I can spare to finish my page, almost 10-12 hours.

I work as a welder and sand blaster. When it's busy season I'm working 60 hours a week. When it's not busy I work 35-40 hours a week.

I bust out pages when I'm not busy so when busy season comes around, updates don't get interrupted as much

I have a full-time job, and I started my comic my second year of college. I was doing a lot of back and forth with school and making the comic. While I don't see my comic as a second job, I also don't see it as just a hobby. Usually what I do in my free time is draw and/or work on my comic. I do want to make a small income from my comic and other artistic endeavors, and that requires a degree of seriousness and effort. But as of now, it's a hobby that is a time sink.

... Well, a few years ago my trick to everything was the fact I had insomnia back then.
I slept only 4 hours, so at 8am I woke up and took care of the housechores, 12pm to 6pm took care of my brother and some of his friends who came from kindergarten (parents paid me to take care of them), then hairdressing from 6pm to 8pm under the hours my aunt needed extra help in her salon then I had a bit of free time to use the pc to chat with friends, watch anime and play games until dinner (10pm) also IK lived 3 streets away from my aunt so it wasn't far away

From 12am to 4am I used that time to draw commissions and for a webcomic, sometimes if I could sneak sketching a bit through the day I would.


When I was younger, I tried to draw for my own fanzines from 7am to 10am, also do housechores. Go to school, come back at 6pm. Take care of my then baby brother (cleaning was endless, since he had bronchospasm and an ear infection, so lots of vomit, liquid diapers thanks to the medicine, and the ear supuration/discharge), then from 10:30pm to 3am I continued drawing until my mom yelled me to go to sleep.


Nowadays I'm a full-time artist. I work from 9am to 5pm, sometimes I still have the habit of working past the hour and do extra stuff just in case. Right now I've been focusing solely on commissions due to some expenses, but once I move to a new apartment I'll go back to comic making, especially since I'll have a proper studio to work more comfortably. I visit family and friends, usually on the weekends
I like to keep my week schedule strict, I go to the gym 3 times a week for only 1 hour and a half mostly for my back, I talk to friends and family through whatsapp before 9am and after 5pm.

I take small breaks between tasks, trying them to be of 15min. During lunch break I watch an episode of a show or a youtube video, making sure its not more than 30 minutes.

The thing is that you won't know how to balance your working and comic making schedules until you are actually going through it, put a few goals and depending in how much you can achieve in that time, you'll be able to measure your expectations or the amount of tweaking you require so you can focus on certain things and how to balance them.

I cut down the detail and the quality in my comic (but in a way that I was okay with, like a really loose sketchy page can still be charming IMO) and took it down to about 3-4 hours a page. Even with my job and disability, I can still squeeze in 15-20 minutes a day to work on it and make it count, which means I can finish a page in 10 days vs. a month of needing to work on it at least an hour a day (I was drawing multiple sketches + perfect linework + hand-lettering back then...).

I think that's kind of the other side of it. You can schedule your day all you want but if you're trying to go for something you physically do not have time for, some part of you will suffer. It might be worth it to reexamine your artistic approach to comic making to ensure that it's something you can do while still leaving time to rest. Sometimes it might even make the comic better since it becomes more clear and concise.

I work 45-50 hours a week as an auto mechanic. When I get home from work I watch the local news & weather, check my socials & regular websites (including this one), and take the dog for a walk, which takes me to about 7:00. What I do after 7 usually depends on whether or not my husband is working evenings. If he is, I will take the alone time to write or draw. If he’s not, and is at home, I’ll usually read while he watches TV. If this sounds weird it’s because I need to be alone while I’m writing or drawing, because I am too easily distracted (damn you ADHD!).

For the past few months I haven’t been able to concentrate on writing because of some health problems going on in the family, but I’ve still managed to draw some stuff.