By yirkahr on Skatehive
Charging for what you love is not a sin, nor a betrayal of your essence. Rather, it is an act of courage and clarity. Sometimes we've been taught that money taints the sacred: poetry, music, the art of listening, the gift of caring. But tell me, does a garden cease to be beautiful because it receives water and sun daily? Or does a flower become less genuine because its roots drink from fertile soil? Charging for what you do is acknowledging that your time, your talent, and your tenderness have value. It's understanding that putting a price on your craft doesn't diminish its magic, but rather sustains it. Because to keep painting sunrises, you need brushes; to keep embracing souls, you need a rested body; to keep creating, you need a meal at sunset. It's not commodifying the soul, it's dignifying the work. It's saying: "What I offer comes from within me, and for it to continue being born, I also need to live." So if someone asks you sarcastically or doubtfully, "Charge for what?", answe