Yes, this. Hobbies cost money but they’re worth it. In addition to all the benefits she mentions I’ve also noticed growth in myself, like confidence in speaking with other adults, a great bond with other people in the business, and creativity in coming up with business straegies that work. Not to mention keeping my sanity by giving me something besides housework to do. And anyway, my hobby pays for itself. I can’t speak for others. I’m speaking for myself. It’s doing really well. It’s still in the early stages (1.5 years) but I have a great customer base and a few people under me, so I don’t have to use his paycheck to fund my business. It’s a priority in my life.
I agree my personal finances are way off topic and semi none of anyone’s business here. But I’ll go ahead and say we get our taxes professionally done and there are no issues precisely because I run my business as a business. Not just a hobby. I do make profits - all I do with them is reinvest into the business and sometimes get a coffee. The write offs I take are for things like mileage, postage, training, and vendor fees to do a show, not buying more product for myself. I am very serious about running this as a business and my success shows it. Of course there were startup costs, but it’s not costing the family anything now except some of my time. And it is well worth it. For me personally it’s insulting and discouraging when I’m working hard and having this much success for my husband to blow it off as “just a hobby.”
Again, the only time he takes issue with it is when we argue, and then he says I prioritize it above the children/cleaning house which just isn’t true. Many times the house gets cleaned because customers are coming over for a workshop! I have mentioned it to him in the past day or two as a topic we need to discuss now that we’re on good terms again. He was noncommittal but we’ll get there.
The counselor yesterday told me to make a list of specific things I need, because part of the problem may be I’m too vague and indirect in communicating that to him. That can cause him to shut down because he feels burdened to try to figure out what exactly I want, or he assumes I’m already getting what I want. And it also gives me clarity to know the key things to work toward, and be able to recognize progress. I’m going to start her, and you can bet “allowed” time for my business will be on the list of needs.