2020 Financial Beneficiaries (folks I sent money to)
Each year as they get older, I gave the Earthquakes more discretion on where to donate our income. As the next generation inheriting our earth, they get approval and veto power on our donations, as well.
Because I can’t count on steady income from affiliate & consultations, I based my contribution budget on slightly-more-stable expected patreon income, aiming to reinvest 10%+ of my post-tax patreon checks back into the community.
I ended up donating about 45% of my post-tax patreon income, which turned out to be about 34% of my net take-home salary overall. This inflated rate is due in part to this being my first year having enough to take home and pay some bills, on top of the fact that 2020 was a horrible shit-show of a year, and everyone, everywhere, needed help.
But in 2021 I will NOT be able to live on 16k/year, and will donate on a more sustainable sliding scale – in reasonable proportion to what I earn.
- ACLU
- Autism Women’s Network
- Black Futures Lab
- Bellamy Shoffner: Anti-racism education for children
- Black Girl In Maine: Anti-racism education for white people
- The Broke-Ass Transwoman: Sexism & trans rights & education, often at the intersection of being a Black woman (transparency disclosure for nepotism: this is my step-sister.) Midway through she re-focused her work on ‘Fast Times at DnD high’
- Campaign Zero
- Chelsea Collaborative
- Creative Action Institute (transparency disclosure: Louisa, the director of Programs & Partnerships is my friend. She’s so great!)
- Crip Camp Emergency Fund
- Disability Visibility Project Via Alice Wong on Patreon: Advocacy for disability rights & representation
- Donors Choose & local public schools: Classroom supplies for students because our broken system won’t allow tax dollars to pay for school computers and necessary curriculum supplies. Support your local public schools, folks! And then match that donation for a student in a local school in an area with a lower household median income. Conservative nincompoopery works around equity funding to ensure that schools with white, wealthy families can use private donations for things like school library books, computers, and basketballs, which makes it hard for underfunded schools to apply for tax-based support for the same things.
- Elizabeth Warren Campaign
- FANG Community Bail Fund
- Families Belong Together (Immigrant rights)
- Flippable
- Greater Boston Food Bank
- Graeme Seabrook
- Green Light Project
- Hollaback
- Immigrant Families Together
- Incite!
- International Indigenous Youth Council
- International Rescue Committee
- Jessica Kellgren-Fozard
- Juxtaposition Arts, in coordination with our #FamilySummer4BlackLives campaign, spearheaded by Wee The People this summer, in coordination with our Ending Police Brutality Toolkit
- Karam Foundation
- Keep the Mendez family together, supporting a local father targeted by ICE
- Liberated Capital: A Decolonizing Wealth Fund
- Liberation Library:
- Lydia X. Z. Brown
- Massachusetts Homeless Coalition
- Matthew Rushin
- Migizi
- Movimiento Cosecha
- Muslim Justice League
- National Bailout: Free Black Mamas
- Native American Civil Rights Fund
- Navajo Water Project
- Newton Food Pantry
- Newton Free Library
- NSW Rural Fire Service (supporting the kids’ class fundraiser for Australian wildfire relief)
- Outright Youth Catawba Valley
- People’s Kitchen Collective & our local community farm
- Place Inside of Me Fundraiser, in coordination with our #FamilySummer4BlackLives campaign
- Planned Parenthood
- Project Bread
- Ramp Your Voice!: Disability rights for Black women
- Refugee Strong
- Rosie’s Place
- Samatha Irby
- Seeding Sovereignty
- Seeding Sovereignty
- Southside Harm Reduction Services
- TC KIDS Mental Health
- TGI Justice Project
- Trans women of color collective
- Unite To Light
- Violence In Boston (the name is unclear – they’re against it)
- Wôpanaâk Language Reclamation Project
- A white lady who asked me for money for her town election in that aggressive white lady way that I’m not equipped to handle, and it just seemed easier to give her $5 than deal with the drama, sorry.
- Personal aid for a local housekeeper: In solidarity with the Essential Workers Bill of Rights, we’ve been paying a local mother from Guatemala who supports her family by cleaning houses so she can stay home and support a family member with pre-existing conditions.
- Personal aid for a family friend waiting on unemployment checks backed up due to Covid, to help pay rent.
- Refunds for former patreon supporters financially impacted by Covid
- Compensating for what we consume: Tip jars for organizations and programmers who experiment and rely on interdependence & anti-capitalism
- 5 Calls & Resistbot: Both of these make referencing legislation & contacting my reps an easy part of my morning routine
- Add-on tips for Go Fund Me & Actblue so recipients don’t have to pay for processing fees.
- TKSST.COM: Was hoping I could use this for our lessons and wanted to contribute to another parent of color who seems to do what I do, but with videos. It turned out to be unusable for our needs.
- Our local NPR station (WBUR), after vetting all the local ones available to us, this seems to be the only one not fueled on clickbait and generating outrage.
2020 Income
Affiliate links
OF COURSE, this first year when all that fiddling with Amazon affiliate links finally pays off, it’s gotta be the same year we make the moral decision to switch to Bookshop affiliate links. The 360% surge over last year came from everyone shopping online during the pandemic (I don’t just get a cut of amazon books, I also get a cut of whatever you order when you click through my links.) So I expect to lose this income as all of our new posts moving forward will contain Bookshop links whenever possible.
Patreon contributions
Despite losing a lot of patreon support this year due to members of our community hit hard by the pandemic, patreon support stayed pretty steady. The rate of new contributors dropped significantly (obvs, we’re in a recession), and it has been unpleasant and scary knowing that I’m still relying on the kindness of a little under 350 people to keep contributing for stuff I’m already giving away for free. But our community remains rock-steady – and rest assured that if you had to discontinue your support this year due to hardship, you’re still a solid, important part of our community who contributes by caring for your family and doing the work in other ways.
You can actually see the stats for our patreon popularity over on Graphtreon. Try to avoid the ‘top creators’ list, as it will send you into a spiral of despair to see how much more people are willing to pay for misogynistic cartoons, quick-takes, and sloppy-researched history lessons by white dudes on the youtubes.
It’s hard to justify not donating everything I have, because look at the numbers! Less than 400 people actually believe this work makes a difference enough to support it. So while it makes no logical sense, it’s hard to say, ‘Yes I deserve to be paid and keep the money I earn’ when we have so few people voting with their dollars toward that message. So until I can create something awesome enough that folks want to support RL more than say, podcasts about wealthy dude problems or fan art featuring naked cartoons, it feels like a moral imperative to re-invest huge portions of my earnings so long as I have shelter and meals available.
Former contributors & income streams:
(2019 and previous)
- Solidarity Machine: T-shirt shop run by the lovely David Beasley. It’s currently closed because they’re working on other cool stuff.
- Googlesense ads: I discontinued this because keeping an eye out for problematic ads was a pain, and not worth it for the roughly $30 bucks a year.
- My brother-in-law covered website hosting for the first year-and-a-half until this site started to get tons of traffic and doxx threats – now I pay for a more secure host.
- From spring of 2018 through winter 2019, my father traveled abroad after retiring, and I used the car he left behind for trips to the library
- Before she got overwhelmed with other care-taking duties, we would get free babysitting from my mom a few times a year when she will take them for 8 hours or overnight.
- Nathan S Ray (see above) covered my out-of-pocket expenses and costs of running Raising Luminaries & Books For Littles from 2014-2019 until I started making enough to cover my expenses.
2020 Expenses
There’s the obvious stuff, like taxes, accounting, office supplies.
This was the first year I didn’t squeak by with just enough to pay our income tax. We started paying down the childcare debt I took on in 2018 to pay for childcare so I could work (see below), paying 20% of that debt down.
‘Office & studio space’ means – the kids are now home 24/7 during the pandemic, I have an auditory sensory disability, so I installed a lot of sound baffling to absorb the screams (both the Earthquakes, and mine). We’ve also had to start homeschooling, which means paying for more paper, drawing supplies, a big glass board, and paint and lights to convert our old room into a home-school room so they can focus during lessons.
‘Marketing’ is a Little Free Library I purchased so I could share all the books publishers have been sending to me for review. Seems a waste to just keep them to myself.
And this year, I actually contributed to our family by paying for a portion of our housing and food. Huzzah! Thank you, friends, for making this possible, and keeping us pushing for another year.