Dear all,
Sorry it’s been a while since I have
blogged. I have been meaning to and meaning to…but…you know how it goes.
I should warn you, I’m going to do some uncontrollable
chatting here, I’ll do my best to keep it coherent but it may meander. It feels
like I have a lot to say, but it’s probably mostly headlines, let me get the
initial news out of my system and then perhaps I can do further blogs later.
So…
Part One – Change
1. I have resigned from my job.
2. I’m going to move to Spain for
a year.
I have been at my current place of work for
nearly nine years but the last two have been pretty miserable. Now the thing
is, my last day is the 23rd December so I haven’t actually left yet.
I don’t feel it’s right to talk about it until I have gone. I won’t be
mentioning names or anything like that regardless, but it just seems a bit
unfair to talk about why I have decided to leave when I still have a month to
see through. So this one is definitely a blog for the New Year, let’s catch up
about it later. For now, let’s just say that it was a good job but I wasn’t
happy there anymore.
Number 2 then.
I spent my 20s paying off the debt I
managed to accrue from moving out of home at 17 and having a somewhat
insouciant attitude with money (well, not entirely without merit, I did some
good with it.) Then, so far, my 30s have been all about saving. I turned 34
last week and I have managed to save up a decent amount of money. I have no
debt; I have no responsibilities at all in fact! And there is the key to it. A
couple of years back, I had a girlfriend, I was enjoying my job, I was looking
at options of buying a property and it was all going in the right direction.
Then life took one of its somersaults it unpredictably decides to do every now
and again and I find myself in a different position. The girlfriend decided her
life was better without me in it, the job took a good left-right left-right
combination to the jaw and when it finally came to being serious about
house-hunting I realised I couldn’t afford to buy square root of bugger all.
The thing that you have to appreciate is that I live in London and like many
cities and many economies, there are always options, but you have to be
careful. You can sign up to something that hurts you more than it helps you and
did I really want to tie myself into a serious amount of debt when I wasn’t
happy in the other areas of my life? Possibly trapping me into being somewhere
and doing something I may not want to? You can look up all the statistics you
want, you can compare yourself to a thousand different metrics, friends, family
or just your own expectations. But when it comes down to it, you have to answer
to yourself with brutal honesty, so I saw it like this. I have money saved, not
enough to travel the world and live carefree, but enough that I could take a
year out and think things through (frugally that is) so what is stopping me?
The thought that I will shortly be in my mid 30s without a job, without a
pension, without a home, without being married, without having kids…without
having stability. Now you can read that last sentence like a worried and
anxious parent who is concerned their child is throwing away their career…or
you can read that sentence like Austin Powers who has just realised he is
single again. Pessimist or optimist?
I didn’t think of it in either way if I am
honest, but I did ask myself some very searching questions.
1. Was I serious about writing?
2. Did I believe in myself?
3. Did I feel like an adventure?
4. Did I feel I needed to take a
positive step in my life?
I answered all of those: Yes.
5. Did I enjoy my job so much that
I couldn’t think of life without it?
6. Did I enjoy my job so much that
I was happy with it taking away my time and energy from writing?
7. Did I love money so much I
couldn’t give up my decent salary?
8. Did I see myself working until
65 (67, 68, 69…70!) in the same field of work?
9. Was I scared of trying
something new?
10. Was I scared of failing?
11. Was I scared of starting all over?
I answered all of those: No.
Then I gave myself a whole bunch of ‘what if’
questions and tested myself over and over on how serious I was. Over the course
of just a week, I finally made my mind up.
What
if…I quit my job and used up my savings to live in Spain for a year? What if I
lived on my own and wrote every day? What if I spent a year living healthily
and exercising every day? What if I spent a year working on Thinking Plainly Limited
without interruption? What if I just did it?
Well I am just doing it. My last day at
work is the 23rd December and I fly out to Spain 8th
January.
Part Two - Hopes
So whether you want to pat me on the back
and say what a brave thing to do, or perhaps you want to give me a slap around
the face and tell me how foolhardy I am being; here is what I am hoping for.
At the top of the list of course has to be
the hope that I write every day. It’s not really a hope though is it! It is a promise
to myself. A guarantee. A self-imposed directive. I must write! There is
absolutely no point at all in doing this if I don’t work the hardest I have
ever worked. Not in the same sense that you work hard for your company, or your
boss, your family, your partner or whatever it may be, but in order to prove to
myself that I am capable of doing what I think I can, then I am going to have
to push myself hard every day.
This is where I need to stop and explain
something that is niggling at me. I’ve just been telling you how the last
couple of years have been tough blah blah as if I’m the only one who has ever
gone through a difficult period, and in one respect it looks as if I am giving
up on my current life because it hasn’t turned into the life I thought it would
be…well that is sort of true. I am giving up. I am changing direction. I’m not
where I thought I would be. However, I do not want to sound like a spoilt naïve
don’t-know-how-lucky-I-am western developed world arrogant middle class
pretentious kid. I know how lucky I am. I was born in one of the most
privileged cities in the world, I had a good education, I had a mother who did
everything she could for me, I always had support in whatever I wanted to do, I
have had nothing but minor health issues, I have always had employment and I
have always had friends. I’m not throwing that away in a fit of temper because
I was dumped, or because my job has become more unpleasant, or because I can’t
afford to buy a nice big house in the country. For anyone reading this who has
followed me over the last two years you may be wondering what the hell I am complaining
about! I set up Thinking Plainly Limited on the 17th January 2012
and therefore just a matter of days after packing my bags for the continent I
will be celebrating the second anniversary of my own company. I’m fantastically
proud of that and if I were to look at that alone, the last two years have been
amazing! I have self-published, I have published others, I have met fantastic
new friends and learnt more about the process and the business of writing than
I ever could have imagined. I have more reason to be hopeful about the future
than ever! AND THAT IS THE POINT! It is not because I am ungrateful for the
life I have and it is not because I think I am owed a life better than anyone
else. I just want something different.
So, yes, I saw myself working at my current
job for many more years to come, at one point I saw a life long career there.
Yes, I still love London. Yes, I still love my friends and family. But my
circumstances have changed and instead of working around them and adapting to a
new version of my current life, I am going to fold my hand in and ask for a new
one. It’s only a year for goodness sake! It will probably go in the blink of an
eye, who knows what I will feel like in a year’s time, what other influences
will have affected me, what other opportunities or disasters may come my way.
There is nothing wrong in giving something a try is there? It is almost
guaranteed that if you offer up a suggestion like this to someone who is older
than you, their first response will be to say something along the lines of, ‘I
wish I had done something like that.’ They will encourage you to try, and to
experiment as they often regret not taking a leap of faith themselves, and so
all I am doing is taking them at their word and putting myself in a position
where when I (cross-fingers!) turn 50, 60, 70, 80 years old I can be satisfied
with myself that I tried. So should I come back in a year’s time, broke,
unemployed, without a single page of writing to my name…but a smile on my face,
I hope that’s good enough!
(But I won’t I promise you, there WILL be
lots of new stories.)
So back to the hopes, thanks for keeping
with me.
I hope that time out of London will give me
the opportunity to slow my life down. I find it hard to accept that my last
self-published story went online in July 2012. I have thoroughly enjoyed working
with the new Thinking Plainly authors, Rufus Garlic and Alfred Duff however,
that has been enormous fun and a fantastic learning process that has made me a
better writer and more focused on the business of writing than ever before, so
I have a lot to thank them for. It has taken up a lot of time but every minute
has been worthwhile. It is more that I have found it increasingly difficult to
get home from the day job and still be able to clear my mind enough to sit down
and write. It just doesn’t happen anymore. As a result I haven’t been able to
finish anything. My mind is cluttered.
Having time away from everything I hope will empty my mind of anything not
related to my writing.
I hope that alongside the writing itself, I
can also focus properly on the business side of things. For instance, I haven’t
concentrated any time on marketing this year at all, I haven’t developed my
accounts with Kobo, Scribd and other platforms, I haven’t developed my
knowledge of Google advertising and social media strategies, I haven’t
developed…well, let’s just say I have a lot on the business side that I want to
take more seriously and I hope this will give me the time to research and learn.
I hope to READ! Remember that! Ah, those
wonderful days when you could float away with a book and not have the next
day’s meeting on your mind, or the report that still needs to be finished
pushing its way into your personal time. It has been years since I have
devoured novels one after the other just for fun and enjoyment. I want to get
back to that. My ‘to-read’ list has been disgustingly untouched and only grown
over the years so I need to do read again!
I hope to become a calmer person. This is
something everyone can relate to I’m sure but especially when living in a busy
city like London you can allow the pressures of daily life to erode you
somewhat. I don’t like the fact I can be quite a rude person when I am on the
rush hour train, I can be irritable, unpleasant, withdrawn. I don’t like having
to sit on a train, squeezed into an uncomfortable position, for up to an hour
just putting my life on pause until I can unfold myself on the other side. I
can’t take listening to people’s music devices playing too loudly out of their
earphones, and sometimes, just straight from their phones or whatever. I can’t
relax, I can’t settle. I don’t like how people talk about such private and
personal information openly to a carriage full of strangers, freely swearing
and cursing even when young children are present. I don’t like how people are
so disconnected from personal-responsibility that whether it is a 45 year old
businessman in an expensive suit or a 17 year old jack-the-lad in tracksuit and
hoodie, everyone just discards their newspapers, empty (or still full) coffee
cups, banana skins, chocolate bar wrappers and whatever else they have on them,
straight onto empty seats near them or simply to the floor. People do not care
anymore at all. They expect someone else will come along and tidy up for them.
Someone, more often than not, from another country that has arrived to Britain
to work hard for a better life and be part of a progressive liberal society,
ends up picking up the litter of people who seemingly don’t care about anyone
outside their immediate circle of family and friends. It’s like watching a
distorted sense of upstairs-downstairs class and race snobbery every morning
and evening. That’s just one example. I
could go on. I don’t want to get stressed anymore watching people disrespect
their environment, their community and society in general. At the moment, I see
it on a daily basis. As a result, I have become a bitter person. And I repeat.
I love London. I just feel that a bit of space and time alone will help me feel
compassionate again. I would like to be able to walk the streets, travel on
public transport, drink in the pubs, eat in the restaurants without having a
built up irritability ready to be triggered by the smallest of impolite
gestures.
I am hoping to blog properly! As regular
readers may have noticed, I haven’t been posting as regularly as I should have,
and as I want to. I just find it hard to fit it in. Not only do I want to blog
more often but I want to be a better blogger. If I can have the time to blog
more then I would like to include my experiences in Spain, a sort of travel
diary I suppose (although I won’t be travelling much, but you know what I
mean), how I am finding it being alone and how my writing is going, perhaps to
talk about other aspects of my life that are the background to my writing,
maybe I can include thoughts on my influences, my interests, my struggles with
writing, with my health, with depression, with money, with all the things that
have made me, me. I have focused on writing specifically in the past because
that is the community I want to be part of, but with more time, perhaps I can
widen that so that it is a personal blog that doesn’t have to separate the
aspiring writer me, with the me that makes up everything I am.
I hope to enjoy living in a different
country! It seems obvious doesn’t it? It’s not though. People can find it very
hard to integrate into another society. I’m only going for a year but I don’t
intend on just sitting inside all day. I want to learn the language. I want to
do lots of walking to experience the country. I want to cook their cuisine. I
want to be part of their community. That doesn’t mean I am going to neglect my
work. If I am serious about wanting to get a lot done then I expect to be at my
laptop writing for several hours a day, writing can be an unsociable business,
but I am not going to isolate myself. When I mentioned above why I feel I can
be a less-tolerant person than I like to be, than I know I am, because of the
strains of living in such a highly populated busy city, I know those same
pressures apply to people all over the world. I don’t expect those to simply go
away, but I do want to experience life without them for a while, I want to not
always be in a rush.
Part Three – Keep Reading!
I want anyone reading this to know I am not
rich. Once my savings go, that’s it. No one is going to bail me out, I don’t
have a family trust fund waiting to mature, I don’t have a job waiting for me…I
don’t have anything in fact! I have enough to last a year if I live on a very
tight budget. I need to eat and drink with restraint (which is good because
another thing about living in a busy area like I do is that the temptation to
live off fast food has finally broken me. I used to exercise every day and
cook. Now I rarely even go for a walk and eat take away food constantly. As a
result I have put on a lot of weight this year and I am deeply unhappy about
that) and enjoy the simple pleasures of walking rather than spending ridiculous
amounts on going out. I don’t even think about it when buying a pint of beer in
the pub and it costs £4 or £5, buying a very average sandwich for the same, it’s
normal. The amount I spend on things that I don’t need to really upsets me and
I want to get back to living a much simpler life. I’ve lost my self-control
when it comes to that and I want it back. I hope I have come across okay in
this blog, it’s far more personal than any I have written before, and it will
only become more personal in the future, so I’ll say just one last time that I
am a very average normal personal that wants to be a writer, wants to share my
experiences and wants to take a risk.
Thanks for reading this, I hope you will
keep reading my blog next year and keeping in touch with what I am up to
(including those promised new short stories!) Don’t forget to follow me on all
my other social media sites too. I have no idea what the Internet connection
situation is like where I am going and how easy it will be for me to be active
on Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest and all the rest of it, but either way, here’s
hoping I get a lot of work done!
One more thing…don’t ask me about 2015…I
have no idea!
Take care everyone,
RGR
P.S: Please join me on all my social media pages:
- Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Robert.G.Rankine
- Twitter: https://twitter.com/thinkingplainly
- Google+: https://plus.google.com/+RGRankine
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rgrankine
- Instagram: http://instagram.com/rgrankine
- Flickr: https://www.flickr.com/people/thinkingplainly/
- YouTube 1: https://www.youtube.com/thinkingplainly (Personal Channel)
- YouTube 2: https://www.youtube.com/thinkingplainlyltd (Company Channel)
- Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/thinkingplainly/
- Foursquare: https://foursquare.com/thinkingplainly
And Author Profile Pages to keep informed of the latest releases:
- Amazon UK: http://amzn.to/IqRZK (Click 'Add to Favourites’ under profile photo)
- Amazon US: http://amzn.to/1CIEjaf (Click 'Add to Favourites’ under profile photo)
- Nook: http://amzn.to/1CIEjaf
- Google: http://bit.ly/1yyMhQx
- Scribd: http://bit.ly/1xVQlLh
- Apple: Author page not available yet - search R.G Rankine
- Kobo: Author page not available yet - search R.G Rankine