This document discusses using a vertical-cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL) as an optical clock source for atomic clocks. It aims to create a more power efficient and compact atomic clock by replacing microwave components with a self-oscillating VCSEL. The VCSEL's polarization self-switching property allows it to act as an oscillator. Changing the VCSEL's drive current can tune the self-oscillation frequency by altering the cavity phase, as represented by the heterodyne beatnote between orthogonal polarization modes. Rotating a quarter wave plate in the external cavity feedback loop can also tune the frequency. Calculations match experiments showing frequency tuning from varying the birefringence and quarter wave plate offset angle.