Write or Die
2010 was the worst year of my life.
After a very successful career in the banking industry,
I suddenly found myself unemployed, my marriage falling apart and to add insult
to injury my father dying. I had a 10 month old daughter and suddenly, I was
back living with my unmarried, child-free sister with two children. Life was
bleak and the most terrifying part about the whole situation was I had
absolutely no idea what I was going to do.
I was attending university for a degree in
International Business but who was I kidding? I’d always hated business; I was
good at banking but should I base my career on something I was simply good at
or should I be doing something I love? This was my dilemma and I had no one to
blame for my predicament but myself.
Plenty of women had overcome more tremendous obstacles
so why was I feeling sorry for myself? I steeled my spine and decided to make
some real decisions. In the middle of the detritus which was now my life, I
found a wonderful and caring man I fell hopelessly in love with but the problem
was he didn’t live in this country and he was a successful and driven attorney.
What would he want with someone like me? Unemployed, two children, divorced and
somewhat shaky ambitions at an age where most women had it made, were married
and excelling towards middle age. My life was a mess and I needed a man like a
fish needs a bicycle (thanks, U2!).
I took a long hard look at my life and realized I had
failed to plan and therefore I had planned to fail.
When I stood at that podium and looked at the few
family and friends who had bothered to show up at my dad’s funeral, my life
became so clear. My father had had so many chances; so much lost opportunities
and had blew all of them due to fear and inertia. I was my father’s daughter; I
was falling into that same black hole of despondency with no way out.
It took another fourteen months before I had the actual
courage to see out my dream and make it a reality. Isabelle Solal had written a
book, In The Past Imperfect, and her
good friend, Sion Dayson, had promoted it on her blog. She was tired of waiting
for the agent who would never accept the publisher who could never take a
chance and had decided to self-publish her fictional book on Amazon. Was this
possible? Could I self-publish? Could I take my book which I had tried to find
an agent for the past eight years or so and do it myself? Say it isn’t so!
I was so excited about the possibility of publishing, I
dug it out of the place it’d warmed my different hard drives and laptops over the
years, decided at over one thousand hard back pages, it was much too long to
publish as a full length novel, chopped it up into eight parts and hit publish
on the first part.
I was ecstatic as I had done my own cover (a beautiful
statue which captivated me while I was on my European vacation) and it was just
so perfect. Unfortunately, no one else knew I existed and that is when I
realized publishing was more than just about hitting a button. I had to make
sure my novel was edited, the right cover was used to attract attention and
there was a whole list of indie writers I didn’t know about but they were there
and ready to be at my service.
In the beginning, I only used Kindle’s Direct
Publishing board because that was the only one I knew about. Another writer,
Athanasios, who wrote a thrilling book titled Mad Gods, told everyone on the KDP boards about a new Facebook
board group called Indie Writers’ Unite. I joined, Cheryl Bradshaw, the creator
of IWU accepted me, and the rest is history.
I wish I could say I am selling thousands of copies and
I got the guy but that isn’t life and nothing happens without time. I am
selling and many people have discovered my work; I have met some of the bravest
men and women on the planet at IWU and I feel like a million bucks even if my
life still isn’t a bed of roses. The guy, like everything good in life, will
take some time and I am willing to put it in and make the effort; nothing worth
anything is easy to accomplish for the matter.
I love to write so that is what I’m doing. I enjoy
writing whatever moves me, thus I have work in several different genres
including Women’s Literature, Contemporary Romance, Paranormal, Science Fiction
and Fantasy. I also plan to do a novel I have had in the works for a while that
is firmly Mystery with a Thriller twist.
For the first time, I stayed true to myself, my
ambitions and what I want my life to be and represent. I know it will get
better and all my dreams will come true—many of them already have. My life is
still changing, still revolving but I have come out ahead, stronger and more
positive than I ever thought possible. I learned the hard way either I write or
I can simply subsist and die.
Life is like writing; it isn’t about perfection, but it
is about the possibilities we are given every day, the decisions we make and
what we want to do with them. It is about forks in the road and deciding which
direction to take and making the best with whatever is thrown at us once we
make our decisions. It is the way it should be and that is simply imperfect.
~ ~ ~
Danielle Blanchard is the author of Death Wish and Forever 27.
1 comment:
Thank you, Donna, for posting my story. This has definitely been an interesting journey but I wouldn't trade it for the world. I am so proud to call you one of my indie sisters. ;-)
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