• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Home
  • About
  • Books
    • Quieting the Shout of Should
    • Holy Hustle
    • Holy Hustle Planner
    • You Got This
  • Contact
  • Nav Social Menu

    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • LinkedIn
    • Pinterest

Crystal Stine

Home / community / You Should Charge For That

You Should Charge For That

community

There is freedom in sharing freely

“You should charge for that!”

“You really just share all that for free?”

“You could start a business!”

I’ve heard it all before. The surprised gratitude when someone asks me a question and I answer freely. Or when I stop to take the time to chat with someone at a conference and they see the passion in my eyes as we talk about community building and social media. It hasn’t always been this way for me.

In fact, when I worked a more typical corporate lifestyle, I was selfish with my knowledge. I took in everything I could – I attended classes, earned degrees, watched webinars, and only used the information I learned when it was beneficial to my career advancement. If I taught someone else what I knew, I assumed that made me replaceable.

What it made me was selfish, bitter, a little paranoid, and unhappy.

It was one of many idols God asked me to lay down when that door closed. All the knowledge He’d given me, all the opportunities, He was asking me to share freely. To give back where others had helped me. As a blogger, I learned so much of what I do from others who had gone before and willingly shared best practices and “what not to do.” As a community builder I’d been invited in, welcomed, and encouraged – and God has asked me to do the same. When I began my work as a virtual assistant, I had experienced VAs come alongside me to offer advice without fear of competition, and it’s created in me a heart to pay it forward.

And when it comes to combining my loves of community, social media, and encouraging others? I now work a 9-5 (ish) job that fills my heart, my mind, and also comes with a paycheck – and a desire to teach, equip, encourage and inspire others. I love when women ask me questions about my job, how I do what I do, what tools I use, and how they can get started. Where I experienced the bitterness of hoarding knowledge, God has redeemed it with the freedom that comes with teaching and watching someone else succeed. Every task I’d done in that previous job prepared me for where I am now – in ways that only God could have planned – and now I give it away, because He so gracious gave to me.

It’s not about community or competition, social media or selfishness. It’s a call on my life to be a good steward of everything God has given me in my life – and when it comes giving back to others because of what I’ve learned? Well..I just can’t charge for that.

I’m linking up with the High Calling this week as we chat about “working for free.” 

July 9, 2014 ·

Previous Post: « The Art of Uncomplicated Hospitality
Next Post: What I’m Loving »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Ann Kroeker says

    July 12, 2014 at 10:28 am

    Following that gut response is important to figure out what we’re supposed to be doing with the knowledge God’s given us–whether we’re to package and market it in order to start a business, or give it away as a gift. I suppose a middle ground is possible, as well. Thank you for joining the conversation and sharing your thoughts on Working for Free!

  2. Mary Bonner says

    July 12, 2014 at 5:10 am

    I love your heart, Crystal. Always freely giving to others. This is a beautiful post.

  3. David Rupert says

    July 11, 2014 at 3:38 pm

    I really love the idea of just giving it away. What fun that it! God gave me the knowledge, so who do I think I am for hoarding it?

  4. Jennifer Frisbie says

    July 10, 2014 at 9:38 pm

    “Where I experienced the bitterness of hoarding knowledge, God has redeemed it with the freedom that comes with teaching and watching someone else succeed. ” Honestly, I never understood what freedom in Christ really meant until I handed over the things that I’d locked away, safe inside, to fester into something angry. Into something destructive to my spirit. We think we’re securing a position for ourselves, trying to remain anything but vulnerable. But my goodness, it’s simply amazing to me to see what God can do when we turn it over to him.

    Loved this post today, Crystal. Keepin’ it real…

  5. Sandra Heska King says

    July 10, 2014 at 4:11 pm

    In other words, we imprison ourselves when we hoard our gifts and knowledge. We’re only free when we release them. Love it, Crystal.

  6. Diane Bailey says

    July 10, 2014 at 9:45 am

    Okay this is off the chart fantastic! I’m sharing you with others, susta!

  • Privacy

Copyright © 2026 CRYSTAL STINE AND CRYSTALSTINE.ME · SITE BY DESIGN BY INSIGHT

UNAUTHORIZED USE AND/OR DUPLICATION OF THIS MATERIAL WITHOUT EXPRESS AND WRITTEN PERMISSION FROM THIS SITE’S AUTHOR IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED. EXCERPTS AND LINKS MAY BE USED, PROVIDED THAT FULL AND CLEAR CREDIT IS GIVEN TO CRYSTAL STINE AND CRYSTALSTINE.ME WITH APPROPRIATE AND SPECIFIC DIRECTION TO THE ORIGINAL CONTENT.