In my twenties, bouncing back was never a question. The confidence that comes with youth made me feel I could handle any setback, find the lesson, and turn that straw into gold. As the decades have passed, (I’m now in my fifties) that straw has turned into a haystack and finding my way back through it all has been far more complex than I could have ever imagined.
At 28, I was made redundant from my job as a management consultant and was overcome by shock and shame in equal measure. I was still living with my parents at the time, and not wanting to worry them I decided to pretend to go to work every day until I came up with a plan.
So, every day, I’d put on a suit and wave goodbye to them only to walk past my office and turn left into the library. I did this for eight months – yes, you read that right, eight months. I felt remorse for my deception, but I told myself everything would work out. Having time to really think about what I wanted to do next really helped me and I took the redundancy as a sign that I should follow my dream of becoming a writer.
While at my new office – “the library” – I started working on a book idea in earnest. I came up with an idea about a young Indian woman, raised to fulfil her parents’ dreams of respectability, but who sets off to make her own destiny and disrupts the whole family.
I sent off my manuscript, but it was rejected by every single publisher. Undeterred and driven by a belief that there was an audience for my novel, I decided to self-publish it, telling myself once it became a success, I’d then sell it to a big publisher. I was so confident, that I wrote a list of the future me (now referred to as “manifesting”), and it went something like this: “I’m a bestselling novelist; my books are translated internationally; film rights have been bought…”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 15, 2024-Ausgabe von The Independent.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der October 15, 2024-Ausgabe von The Independent.
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