When you pay down high interest rate debt, no interest is owed on the part that is gone.
I slept on it a bit, and I wanted to specifically talk about this sentence on your post.
I think that this is a very good point to make. By that logic, you could make a strong argument that it makes more logical sense to abandon any side jobs because both my pay, and level of responsibility have gone up significantly. Even though I am still vulnerable to emergencies at the moment, I could just take out a loan and keep it going while maintaining 100% of my time to go towards my new tech job and ensure that I get this contract renewed, and that $120K salary coming. That tech salary is what's going to get me out of this mess, and if I didn't have that income, I would be screwed.
It is definitely true that if an emergency came up that exceeded my debt payoff rate, I would have to take out another loan to cover the difference. It's also true that the interest rate on that debt would be disgusting on said debt(due to me needing more time to raise my credit score.) But, if I were to move that high interest loan to the top of my snowball, then I could attack it and pay it off completely before I was damaged too badly by the accruing interest.
If I kept this up, I think we could all agree that
eventually my rate of payoff would exceed the rate of the emergencies, and then I would be secure with a savings.
As I continue to think about it logically, this might make more sense than me sacrificing my time by running off to cook at some restaurant 2x a week, instead of focusing on my primary job that is paying me $60/hour. Things are different now that I have this job that pays me more, and you could argue that the time lost at a side job to try and prevent emergencies would damage me more than any amount of interest in the short-term while I continue to build my base.
Programming is an extremely taxing job. It would be good to have my time completely freed up, so that I know with 100% certainty that I have enough time to get my work done and I can throw literally everything I have at it. God forbid if I were to ever lose my tech job, I would literally be up a creek and there would be nothing that I could do. That high income is really the only thing that is saving me right now with all this debt hanging around haha.
While 2 days a week at a side job may not sound like much on paper, 2 days of extra studying a week can literally be the difference between me just skating by at my job(or even not getting my work done extra worst case) vs. me passing with flying colors. Therefore, it could be argued that it is preferable to just eat the interest in the short term if an emergency comes up, move it to the top of my snowball, and that it's actually
more dangerous to have a side job because it takes away from coding. Even though I hate the idea of potentially taking out more debt, it is preferable to diverting any time at all away from my tech job, and dealing with high interest in the short term is preferable than reducing my performance as a programmer even a little bit. I can absolutely make the payments(because of my high income), and it would just temporarily slow down my debt payoff a bit. That seems like a better alternative than potentially screwing myself at my tech job due to losing 2 days a week of my time. Obviously, I need to do everything I can to keep my expenses low and keep budgeting.
Ok, just had to get my thoughts onto the page and explain my reasoning again. I should be done writing any more essays in this thread haha.