6 Lessons from the School of Hard Knocks

6 Lessons from the School of Hard Knocks

Hey Achievers, here’s an article from the archives. It’s a real treat as it’s from Summer Goodwin, who I’ve known for the past couple of years as being a determined dreamer. While Summer is a professional freelance writer today, she didn’t start her professional career in writing.

And you know how I’m always obsessed with finding out people’s back stories? Well Summer has a beautiful back story on how she got to where she is today and she very kindly is going to share with us a part of her early journey. So strap in and get ready to learn 6 Lessons from The School of Hard Knocks!

English was one subject I truly loved at school. As a teenager, I would have three novels on the go at any given time. I enjoyed writing anything and everything – from letters to poetry, from short stories to scripts.
But by the end of year 12 I still had no idea what career I wanted to pursue. The women on both sides of my family were nurses. Even Florence Nightingale was in our family tree, my late grandmother told me. In fact, my mother was the only one who wasn’t a nurse.

So, when I finished school I started a nursing degree. It was a Bachelor of Science. However, I wasn’t particularly interested in science and the sight of needles made me squeamish. Nursing clearly wasn’t for me and I dropped out in first semester.

Lesson one: Follow your heart; don’t settle for what everyone else is doing.

I travelled around Australia for the next few years working in hospitality. It was fun, but I still hadn’t found what I was looking for. All I knew was that I was curious and full of questions.

I was 22-years-old when I decided to travel to India and Nepal to ‘find myself’. And I did. By a lake on the roof of the world, I decided to become a writer. I wanted to inspire others by sharing the extraordinary stories of ordinary people. You can read more about that journey here

Writing was such a broad profession; I had to narrow it down. What was the real job? I decided what I wanted to do was called “journalism”. So when I got back to Australia I wrote my first feature about an area high on the Tibetan plateau in India called Ladakh. My article was published in the Perth newspaper, Nova Magazine. I was on my way.

Lesson two: Your unique voice and perspective is your greatest asset. The truth is powerful.

I decided to go to university and study journalism. My mother has always been supportive of my choices, but the rest of my family thought it was a bit of a joke. I don’t think anyone imagined I’d actually finish the degree.
I applied to go to university and was accepted. This was wonderful – except that between having my first article published and attending my first lecture I gave birth and was now getting a divorce. It was a challenging time to say the least. But I was determined to pursue my dream and started full-time studies in 1998.

However, I quickly realised the job prospects were fairly grim. Only eight per cent of you will work as journalists, my lecturer told a room of bright young hopefuls. We all looked around wondering who that would be. The vast majority of students were about five years younger than me and weren’t single mothers. How could I compete?
I needed a back-up plan. So I decided to do both journalism and public relations. Employment in PR was growing fast, rather than shrinking, so I figured I could go between the two.

Lesson three: Be creative. Think about how you can utilise your passion and skills in other areas.

I persevered for seven years of part-time study. My son was eight-years-old when I graduated in 2005, with grades that placed me within the top five per cent of Murdoch University students.

Lesson four: Those who think they are least likely to succeed, overcompensate by working harder so may achieve surprising results.

Our lecturers encouraged us to move to small country towns to break into journalism. So I moved to Darwin the day after my graduation ceremony.

It took me eight months of constant phone calls, emails and visits to the Northern Territory News to get a job interview. The job I got was as an advertising features journalist. Working 9am to 5pm, no weekend shifts. Ok, so it wasn’t reporting in the newsroom, but it was a metropolitan daily. And it fitted well with parenting. I worked at the newspaper for the next two-and-a-half years. So, as it turns out, I was in that eight per cent.

Lesson five: Your dream job may not look like you imagined but it will be just right for you.

From there, I moved into public relations for NT Government and then into marketing, writing online content for Charles Darwin University. I did a stint at ABC Radio. I worked as the freelance senior writer for Darwin Life Magazine. Darwin was a fantastic experience but definitely the school of hard knocks for me. I made some huge mistakes and had some big falls, but I learned so much along the way.

Lesson six: There will be people who continue to believe in you, even when you doubt yourself.

When I moved to Melbourne this year, I had a job to come to. I am a public relations executive at Swinburne University of Technology and it’s another fantastic learning experience.

The reason why I have a successful career today is not because I’m especially talented – it’s because I’ve persevered. I’ve never given up. I may not have my name up in lights, I haven’t won a Walkley award and I still have dreams left to achieve. But I have built a solid and fulfilling career as a writer. To me, that is success. I had a dream and I chased it. And I made it. After 15 years, I’m still compelled to write. I still love it. It’s what I do and it’s all I can imagine ever doing.

 

Meet Summer Goodwin

Summer Goodwin has been a professional writer for 15 years. Her blog, Summer’s notebook, aims to connect, inspire and support emerging and established writers. You can follow her on twitter @summer_goodwin

Meet the Author AJ Kulatunga

AJ Kulatunga is an Entrepreneur, Motivational Speaker and the award winning creator of Dream, Build, Inspire, Lead! who is obsessed with discovering and sharing what makes people valuable. Download a FREE digital copy of his latest book "The 5 Keys to Life" here.


Comments

comments

2 Comments

  1. Carmella Marucci
    Apr 2, 2012

    I love your writing style truly loving this web site .

  2. Tristan Blewitt
    May 15, 2012

    I simply want to tell you that I am just newbie to weblog and certainly savored this web-site. Almost certainly I’m planning to bookmark your blog post . You absolutely have incredible stories. Thanks a bunch for sharing your blog site.

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