This is what Defying the Box Look Like- Fiona Leonard
ByI’m trying out something new today!
I thought it would be cool to share the stories of some real people who are defying the box to create their own version of a Kick-Ass Life.
If you all like this I’ll do it again…..so please be sure to leave your thoughts in the comments below. There will be potential prizes for you if you do.
Meet Fiona Leonard. I first met Fiona in a Law of Attraction program that I was part of about 5 years ago. She had just sold all of her belongings and was setting out to travel across America with her family. She is a fine example of someone who is blazing their own trial.
Fiona is a storyteller and storyseller whose diplomatic background provides the perfect skill set for writing about the world, talking her way out of difficult situations and inspiring people to read what she has written. Her wanderlust has taken her across 20 countries on four continents. She now lives, loves, writes and home schools in Ghana, West Africa, while plotting ways to travel some more.
After years of doing every other sort of writing, Fiona has finally returned to crafting novels – it has proved to be a joyous reunion.
How do you Defy the Box?
Over the last few years I’ve climbed out of a lot of boxes.
Career: I’m self-publishing my second novel as an e-book having decided to forego the traditional publishing route.
Culture: I’m an Australian writer married to a Ghanaian/Filippino photographer, living in Ghana, West Africa. We married while we were both living in Zimbabwe.
Education: I have a ten year old daughter whom I have home schooled for two and a half years.
Stuff: In 2009 we sold up our house and car and put everything in storage and left Australia to spend a year travelling across the US and Canada. At the end of the year we moved to Ghana where we live with my in-laws. If we had to move again tomorrow I think we could fit all our possessions in a car. (And if we threw away all my husband’s photography gear and my daughter’s art supplies, it would probably fit in a suitcase!)
Oh, and I’m also a vegetarian!
Have you always lived an unconventional life?
This question made me laugh out loud! No! Absolutely not.
From a career perspective it’s all been pretty mainstream – I went to a good school, was VERY well behaved, got good grades, went to university, got a job with the Australian foreign service and was a bureaucrat for ten years. After that I spent five years working as a consultant in foreign and trade policy. But I think the unconventional yearnings have been there for a while. We lived in five different houses in ten years (in the same town) so I think you’d have to suspect there was an urge for something different. When I finally jumped I did it in a big way.
What made you take that leap?
This question reminds me of hearing Alanis Morissette talk about winning the Best New Artist Grammy after ten years of gigging and hard work. While there were a number of catalysts - a very dear friend dying of cancer in her 60s, holding a girlfriend’s nine month old son the night before he died, standing under the clothesline and looking up and thinking “Is this it?” - there were also years of inner work, of reading inspirational writers, listening to podcasts, participating in conference calls and diligently journaling day after day.
Why do we take any leap? Because in that moment a lifetime of experiences converge, a good idea is infused with a healthy shot of courage and suddenly you’re airborne.
What does your Kick-Ass Life look like?
I decide where I work, when I work and what I work on. Sometimes that’s a blissful experience; sometimes it’s juggling a lot of balls and wondering how to hold it together. It’s knowing that I’m living a life I’ve actively chosen and one that’s heading me in the direction of where I want to be.
What were the biggest pre-packaged beliefs that you needed to break free of in order to start living it?
There were three main beliefs I needed to move beyond (note: this is still a work in progress):
1.“Lots of people do it that way so it must be right” – When everyone else is doing something a particular way (especially friends and family) it’s hard to stop and say – But I don’t want to do it that way! or But that way just doesn’t work for me!
2.“If you’re not making money you’re not successful” – I have tended to fall into the trap of judging my success by how much money I’m making (or not making) at the time.
3. “Accepting generosity is a sign of weakness” – Asking for help and accepting help is not something I’ve ever been good at. I think that has been exacerbated by my recent lifestyle choices – maybe something akin to “you’ve made your bed now you have to sleep in it.”
What are the biggest challenges that you have faced due to living such an unconventional life?
Knowing where to start is always a challenge. Doing what everyone else is doing is much easier because there’s a road map and you can just follow the rules. When you’re doing something unconventional you’re the one making up the rules. Even if there’s lots of information available (I do a lot of research) you always reach a point where you realize you’re just going to have to make it up as you go along.
Holding my nerve is the other big challenge. For example, it’s one thing to really believe that travel is a great thing for your child, but when it’s the middle of the night and she’s crying and saying ‘I want to go home!’ it tears at your heart. At times like those I really need to come back to my most fundamental values and decide whether how I’m living is in alignment with the sort of person I want to be. I can’t tell my child that she should live a passionate, honest life if I don’t live that way myself.
Writing is very much like that. It’s easier to see how I could be making money writing articles for newspapers and magazines but I really don’t enjoy it, whereas writing novels makes me blissfully happy. When I’m plotting or writing, my mind is going at a hundred miles an hour: I wake in the middle of the night with ideas and I long for the time when I can sit down and write. I never, ever feel that way when I’m writing articles or reports. So I just have to trust that I’m on the right path.
Tell us about your book!
My novel, The Chicken Thief, is set in southern Africa and narrated by Alois, a young chicken thief who wants nothing more than to steal his quota of chickens and go home to bed. But accidents happen and almost before he knows it, he finds himself at the centre of a struggle to rescue a war hero and transform the political landscape. In shouldering another man’s mission, Alois discovers strengths he never knew he had. The result may topple, not just enemies, but an entire government. And it will change Alois forever.
Where do you get your inspiration from for your writing?
While I do mentally file away bits and pieces I see or hear, a lot of the time, I would have to say I have absolutely no idea, which is one of the things I love about writing. I will often start off with a single idea and then just build out from there. When I’m plotting I ask a lot of questions. I tend to think of my characters as real people and interrogate them – “why are you doing this? what’s your family like? do you have a sister?” and then just play around with the ideas that pop into my head. I then go over the details to make sure they fit logically into the story. In the past I’ve been a very impatient writer – I always want to just get to the writing part. With this novel though I spent three months on the plotting, writing notes on the characters, drawing continuity grids to work out the timing and fleshing out some back stories. That sounds very organized and structured, but in reality it was just me in a chair with a notebook and a pencil scribbling furiously! Having a substantial plot/plan made the writing stage a lot easier.
One of my favorite moments in writing is when I’m typing quickly (I write about 1,000 words an hour) and all of a sudden one of the characters says something unexpected. That sounds odd because they’re my characters right? But somehow it happens. I had one moment with this novel where a character blurted something out which was perfectly logical, and sounded good, but then messed up all my subsequent plotting. It took me two days to sort out the rewrites to make it fit.
What advice would you give to someone who was interested in publishing a book?
I’d pass on a fabulous quote I read recently: “What do you call a writer who persists? Published.”
I think it’s crucial that writers ask themselves what they want from their writing – not, what does Dan Brown want from his writing, but what do you want? Do you want to make money? Do you want to see your ideas on paper? Do you want someone to read what you’ve written? Do you want to leave a legacy? Preserve a particular story? Pass on advice? Inspire people? It may be a combination of those answers, but how you proceed will depend on what you want.
And I would add that you shouldn’t be afraid or embarrassed by being honest about what you want. Some people just need to write – getting published is an added bonus. Some people may want to just record a bit of family history that will only be relevant to a few people. While I love writing, there needs to be a point to it all. I get very discouraged if I write something and then it languishes in a drawer. I want to write, I want to be read, and I want to inspire other people to write and publish.
OK…here is where the prizes come in……
Fiona has offered to give away copies of her fabulous new book to three lucky readers. All you need to do is take a minute to write a comment saying how you are inspired by this post. On Thursday we will randomly select three lucky winners to receive a digital version of the book that you can use on your kindle or your computer. We will post the winners on Friday morning.
No related posts.
16 Comments
April 27th, 2011 at 9:19 am
Great interview…
and I am a big fan of you both!
Reading Fiona’s book right now and I am savoring it.
So happy for her!
drew
April 27th, 2011 at 9:23 am
Hi Leah (and Fiona)!
I LOVE this new part of your website and what you are doing.
It was wonderful to read about Fiona’s life and what she did, is doing, how she did it etc.
Love it!!
Thank you and can’t wait to read more.
Love,
A.
April 27th, 2011 at 10:22 am
Wow!
That is such an awesome story! Congratulations Fiona. . or maybe I should say “Keep it up!”. She has such wonderful perspective, what I really take away is that the kick-ass, nonconforming life isn’t a finite goal that you achieve and then stop. It is an ongoing process and flow that you move through as long as choose. Thank You for sharing your story with us.
Thank you Leah for putting this up, please include more.
April 27th, 2011 at 2:34 pm
Thanks so much for inviting me over, Leah. I’m honored to be your first kick-ass life profilee!
Fiona´s last [type] ..Chicken Thief Update- Interview at Defy The Box and a giveaway or two
April 27th, 2011 at 3:47 pm
What a great interview! Fiona, you are an inspiration. In the back of my mind, I’ve always considered myself a writer, and always wanted to write a novel. It’s wonderful that you’ve been able to make that dream come rue for yourself — maybe it’s time I stopped dreaming and started writing!
Thanks, Leah for sharing this story!
April 27th, 2011 at 5:04 pm
It looks like you’re a hit Fiona!
I’m glad you all like this kind of post.
April 27th, 2011 at 5:55 pm
Leah, what a great format and what an inspiring story.
We all have a sense of what a ‘kick ass’ life would look like, but profiling them makes it more real and more tangible.
Thanks Fiona for sharing and thanks Leah for bringing this out!
April 27th, 2011 at 7:48 pm
Do you want to make money? Do you want to see your ideas on paper? Do you want someone to read what you’ve written? Do you want to leave a legacy? Preserve a particular story? Pass on advice? Inspire people? It may be a combination of those answers, but how you proceed will depend on what you want.
That’s the kick ass crux of the story for me. Right now I am going to work because my family believes it build character. I think it’s a hampster wheel with poverty as the destination. I am working my plan and getting ready to get back to my passion. There is nothing worse than knowing your earning potential is not aligned with your pay check. I am doing everything I can to fix it but this gave me an idea. I should sell my car and get the hell out of day job dodge.
April 27th, 2011 at 8:04 pm
Hi Fiona,
Thank you for helping me to get re-inspired on my journey. 3 years ago I sold most everything and headed out West for big adventure, a holistic cure, and to study for a Masters in Live Food Nutrition. Have certainly had some adventures, but none of the ones I had planned and the cure and degree are eluding me at the moment. I have been feeling like a failure, but now that I think about it, those twists and turns of my own personal story plot have strengthened my character in many ways. Even though I am ‘having’ to take a more conventional route and job at the moment, reading your line about unexpected plot twists and re-writes has made me realize that sometimes you have to be inside the story to see where it is going next. I move forward now with a renewed sense of play in this great story of MY Life. Thank you for the inspiration! R xo
April 27th, 2011 at 8:13 pm
Great Job Leah! Loved the interview process and Fiona’s story is inspiring and totally Kick-Ass! I’m all in and vote to read many more of these!
People’s stories are one of my favorite things!
Loved it and Keep ‘em coming!
Beth
April 27th, 2011 at 8:31 pm
Thank you Leah and Fiona for sharing your story. Funny, cause it reminds me a bit of the Weight Watchers stories I’m always reading in their monthly magazine. Everyone has a different way to get “there” and you may be reading about someone who’s doing it differently than you would, but it certainly feels good to know that you’re not alone in re-defining your success and that others have summoned the courage to change and are making it happen! Hope you will publish more stories like this one … a real inspiration. Thanks. Linda
April 27th, 2011 at 10:21 pm
Excellent idea, Leah! And truly outside the box! Brave woman, Fiona, living proof that we can overcome our fears and create a kick-ass life.
April 28th, 2011 at 5:01 am
I would really like to read more stories about people who are actually living the life. Fiona’s writing is very inspiring, and that’s just what I need at the moment. I have been looking too much at the theory and needed a nice reminder as to the point of it all.
Thanks both.
April 29th, 2011 at 11:23 am
Thanks for all the awesome comments!
I will do more of these profiles.
Here are the 3 winners of Fiona’s book-
Alan,Joan,and Rosemary.
Fiona will email you with info,ration about how to collect your copy of her book.
May 16th, 2011 at 9:07 am
Thanks so much to everyone for sharing their comments. It was great to hear from you all.
I’ve sent out books to Alan and Joan, but Rosemary, your email doesn’t seem to be working. Please can you email me via [email protected] with your correct address? Thank you!
Fiona´s last [type] ..Would you really want a critical assessment of your work
June 3rd, 2011 at 9:39 pm
Way to kick ass.
Thanks for the inspiration!
And long live leaps of faith!