My year of living adventurously - in pictures


Wow, 2016 has been one of the craziest rides of my life!

I quit my job, started a business, published 2 books, took my #beingyouisenough presentation to over 25 primary schools, travelled all across the state (Albany to Port Hedland and everywhere in between), made public appearances, held book signings, visited my first aboriginal community, held my first market stall, finished the manuscripts for 3 more books,  met lots of amazing people,  had therapy, cried, laughed, drank too much wine and saw my first live jazz show in years!  
And.....I never felt anxiety, felt trapped or depressed, instead I felt alive! And I did it all with my super-duper husband Andy Macleod Writer, poet, thinker  

Here’s the year in pictures.
 (Photo by Elena Shumilova)

February: Andy and I realised we still needed to eat, and not wanting to get real jobs we restarted our advertising copywriting business, Outside Creative. It's gone from strength to strength, having created the new campaign for Treendale and built up the radio creative side so much that we've now welcomed on board 5 radio stations that we help write commercial copy for.
 



March: I didn't know it then, but this little kids book would literally change my life and take me to places I'd never thought I'd go! But most importantly the book would change the lives of kids and their parents as well. I still get messages from Mums telling me how they cried reading the book, because it says exactly what they wanted to hear when they were young.

April: I started to get featured regularly in the local newspapers much to the amusement of my barber. 'What's wrong? I didn't see you in this week's paper? What! Were you sick?'


 
May: I never envisioned in my wildest dreams I'd be talking to kids at primary schools. However, that became a thing when I was invited to be part of the Margaret River Young Readers and Writers Festival, where I toured 14 primary schools across the south west with BIG  time kids' authors Louise Park and Andrew Daddo!



 
June: My dream of being invited to talk at a writers festival came true when I spoke about Dying to Know: is there life after death at the  Margaret River Readers and Writers Festival in June. I'd have to say it was one of the most amazing experiences of my life.
 
 
July: The South Western Times previewed  my new adult non fiction book, Turning Inside Out. The photo shoot was done in the archive room of the paper and it was freezing. The 'ghost' in the back is journo Lincoln Bertelli
 

August: Heaps of people turned out for the launch my 5th book, Turning Inside Out: what if everything we've been taught about life is wrong at Footprints Resort Preston Beach. And yes it proved once again that I love talking in public as people laughed in the right places and no-one fell asleep!
 

September: Andy and I packed up the car and took the #beingyouisenough tour south to Albany to talk to the kids at Yakamia Primary School.

September: The school visits in Albany were based around my first real instore signing at a book store, in this case Dymocks Albany. It was great to meet so many of my readers and talk about what inspires them.



October: Andy and I packed the car again, this time heading north to take the #beingyouisenough tour to Geraldton. I had great promotional support from all the media including the Geraldton Guardian, Everything Geraldton website, Radio stations 98.1 Spirit and ABC Midwest.



The Geraldton Book Signing was held at Read a Lot Books and the owner was delighted to have sold out of all copies of my books! Plus I got to meet lots of old friends and make some new ones.




November: I'd got myself a booking agent a couple of months earlier and now things got seriously real! I was invited to go on a 3 day school tour of Port Hedland and Norseman, which also included visiting my first remote aboriginal community. I was lucky enough to travel with famous fantasty illustrator Marc McBride.




December: Andy and I took it to the streets, being part of our first ever market event at the Victoria Street Artisan Fayre. We had a cracker day, selling out of almost everything!

Mental Freedom.
 
In less than 12 months I'd gone from suffering some serious anxiety and feeling like a caged animal to being a fully fledged entrepreneur with some sense of control in my life. And strangely that also included letting go of some control and allowing the universe to weave it's magic.
 
Obviously it wasn't all beer and skittles and big bowls of tortellini; we had our tense moments, awkward moments, fear filled  moments and flashes of 'what the hell have we done?' But Andy and I supported and listened to each other and made sure that whatever it was we were doing, was going to work. Most of the time we had no idea of what we were doing, but that was part of the adventure.

Bring on 2017.
 
 
 





Have you jumped before?

Image courtesy of Google Images and Palm Press


Its fast coming up to 1 year since I left the safety of fulltime employment with nothing to go to except a vague hope of doing something fulfilling. I call these moments ‘Jumping Off Points’ or JOPs for short. I’ll write more about what the last 12 months have brought myself and Andy a bit later.  

If you’ve read my mini biography Turning Inside Out: What If everything we've been taught about life is wrong you’ll know that I’ve done it before.  16 years ago I left my radio copywriting job to start my own business from the back room of a friend’s house. I only had a $500 to my name, so I spent it on a computer which didn’t even have a monitor so I had to quickly borrow one. ($500 didn’t get you much of a computer in those days) My learning curve was steep and I had to climb it. There was no other choice.  
And when I look back there were lots of other JOPs in my life, but at the time they went unheralded, they were just things I had to do to change my life at the time or pull myself out of a rut.
JOPs are when we have to leave our existing comfort zone for something unfamiliar, yet whatever it is it promises to be

The day I met the kid with the grotty jumper.

For 20 years I’ve worked in radio advertising were the only people I interacted with were mainly white Anglo Saxon men who owned businesses. Even the rest of the staff at the radio station were usually white and could quite easily put food on the table. 

Working in radio had shielded me from the real world.
And now a little aboriginal kid had shown me what the other side of life can be like.  
He was about 9 years old, with a mop of tangled hair and a jumper that I soon realised may not have been washed in weeks, if not months. The kid looked poor and may also have been one of those kids whose only food for that day had come from the Food Bank that delivered fruit to the school each morning.
But this kid didn’t act poor.

Geraldton Book Signing

I went to Geraldton Senior High School back in 1988 and 1989 and it was a pretty crazy to return 26 odd years later for a book signing at the only book store left in town, Read A lot Books.
Old friends came out of the woodwork and it was wonderful to reconnect and see what they'd been up to. One lady (who I didn't know), had read about my visit in the local paper and bravely came up and asked about Dying to Know and Turning Inside Out and said that her husband had died recently and wanted to find out more about the afterlife. She had missed him deeply and only wanted to know if they would be reunited in the world beyond this one. I saw tears well up in her eyes and I put my hand on hers and said, 'I think so'.


 

How to Get Published. The Basics

(Estimated reading time, 2 glasses of wine)

 
So you've written a book or want to write a book and have no frigging idea of what to do next. Well hopefully over the next couple of glasses of wine I'll help fill in some gaps and give you the motivation and knowledge to take your work out and show it to the world. Disclaimer first: This information is based on my own experience of getting published along with reading countless other blog posts, websites and books by other authors, publishers and agents. So I’ve done all the boring research for you. However this is no way a definitive guide but it can get you started and demystify the publishing process.  
So pour a glass of wine and read on.
It’s all about the money
Keep in mind that publishing is a business designed to make money. Agents and publishers don’t just publish books to make people feel good, they want to know if your book will sell and make money. It’s that simple. Always keep that in the back of your mind when going through this process.
How the publishing industry works – the basic version

·         A publishing house will work with you to get your book finished and to print.

·         They work closely with a distribution company to work on the ‘sales’ angle for your book and then the distributor ‘sells’ the book to bookshops and retail outlets.

Frog and the Well Wall Art and Prints now available.




From a simple request by my sister in law to help decorate her home before it went on the market, I've now had lots of people ask if they could buy their own prints.

The answer is YES!

A4 prints are $25 + pp
A3 prints are $30 + pp

Buy up to 3 prints and get postage for $12.


Here's the link the to the gallery. Frog and the Well Print Gallery.


 

Ghosts of Oz Interview and feature

Amanda from Ghosts of Oz was lucky enough to have a quick chat with author Josh Langley to learn a little about him and hear about his new book “Turning Inside Out”. Grab yourself a cuppa and have a read about one of Australia’s premiere paranormal authors.