Think Outside the Lines

Kimberly Lee: What Are You Still Defending?


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Kimberly Lee spent ten years as a trial attorney — four as a public defender in downtown Los Angeles, six running her own practice. She had the pedigree, the credentials, and a career that looked like everything was figured out. She also had a throat that hurt every time she left the courtroom, a Sunday dread that never went away, and a quiet inner voice that kept growing louder.

Today, Kimberly is a writer, workshop facilitator, and retreat leader who works with creatives and emerging writers. She's the author of Have You Seen Him? — a thriller available now — and the creator of a body of work that exists because she finally stopped outsourcing her sense of self to a title.

This is a conversation about what it means to trust yourself when the path isn't clear, let go of an identity that no longer fits, and build something new without a roadmap.

Connect with Kimberly:  kimberlylee.me 

In this episode, we explore:

  • What it felt like to follow the "right" path into law — and when Kimberly first started to sense it wasn't hers
  • The physical signals her body sent before her mind was ready to listen — and what she did with them
  • What it costs to perform a version of yourself for years, and how that performance eventually runs out of steam
  • Why identity gets so tangled up in impressive-sounding titles — and the quiet act of resistance it takes to let that go
  • The moment at a birthday party that became an unexpected test of who she was becoming
  • What actually transfers from a high-stakes legal career into creative work — and what she was more than happy to leave behind
  • Imposter syndrome, the non-linear path, and why forging your own way requires a tolerance for uncertainty
  • The difference between people who thrive in hard environments and those who carry that environment home with them
  • People pleasing, saying yes to the wrong things, and how Kimberly learned to pause before committing
  • Fear as fuel — and the Nelson Mandela quote she adopted to replace the win/lose binary she left behind
  • What "I either win or learn" looks like in practice when you're building something from scratch

Resources & Links:

  • Ready to step off autopilot? Visit thinkoutsidethelines.com to access free worksheets designed to help you cut through the noise, ask the right questions, and finally hear yourself clearly
  • Explore 1:1 coaching and other resources at thinkoutsidethelines.com
  • Follow along on all platforms → @thinkoutsidethelines

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Think Outside the LinesBy Shawn Feeney

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