Acting and Theatre: When Plan C is Really Plan A but Better

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It’s only when friends remark that I light up when talking about acting or theatre, or when someone notes that I’ve seemed a lot happier and more energetic over the last few months than I did for many years previous that I notice that, in general, I am a lot happier these days.

It’s stunning how obvious it should have been. I didn’t get a degree in theatre thinking it would make me rich; I didn’t even think I could make it a full time job. I did it because it was the only thing I really, really wanted to keep on studying. I wanted to keep on doing theatre, investigating, practicing it, creating it. I enjoyed acting (but detested, and detest, memorizing lines); I enjoyed researching the history and critical theory of theatre; I enjoyed creating in a space, in a time, with people that would all come together only the once and never again be exactly the same. I figured I was good at it and could give something to the discipline.

I forgot all that for a while. Somehow, in the ordinary way that tends to happen, I wrapped up college in a damn hurry to find reliable pay – and the more elusive it was the more the view of my future became tunnel vision with a paycheck as my goal. Eventually I did find a full time salaried gig and set about trying to become an adult. It worked, maybe too well. Of course, I meant to try to get back to theatre somehow, but my attempts were desultory and I didn’t get anywhere (largely due to not knowing where to start with nothing but a degree going for me). In the meantime I worked the dayjob and I became like so many working stiffs: content to pursue a paycheck as evidence of my worth, saving up vacation days for travel, budgeting for little luxuries, contributing to charities when disaster struck, bestowing Christmas presents on family and friends…. And living with a mild depression that I assumed was just part and parcel of life.

Hearing things like “everyone hates their job” and having no reason to think that there was anything wrong with being gainfully employed, I didn’t second guess the continual dark clouds and bad mood that accompanied me more often than not. In retrospect, even the diagnosis of dysthemia had a way locking me in place, but that’s really only from one point of view. It has actually helped me to understand what is going on with me; why I passed so many days feeling emotionally submerged. Knowing the name of a problem goes a long way toward dealing with the problem. But now I have to explain to myself why the persistent bleakness isn’t quite so persistent these days.

I admit, that’s not really a problem. It’s good to know that when I’m busy and stressed anxiety kicks up and that can trip the darkness into central focus. It’s not that a situation is really that tough; it’s just my wiring over-reacting to difficult situations, trying to protect me from hard, scary things. My immune system does the same thing when I’m around cats.

But it’s been fascinating, hell, wonderful to find that the love I have for performing comes out even when I’m just sitting around talking about something I saw on stage or heard about theatre or experienced that in some way connects to that communion I was always wanted when I first fell for the theatre.

It’s a little funny, largely ironic, that friends who’ve known me for a while get taken by surprise by how much more energetic I am when I’m going on about a play or my theatre company or my latest forays into voice over. I didn’t notice the difference until it was pointed out; and friends didn’t know there could be a difference. I didn’t realize sleep would be more effective, that my mind would pay better attention or that I could give up caring about the myriad bullshit limitations in my way made of business appropriate clothing, business appropriate language, gym memberships, cash for happy hour, best practices, SLAs, PowerPoint, Excel, networking with Sales and touching base with managers and that it would make me feel like weights had come off my legs.

It’s the difference between unemployment and looking for another office job and unemployment but redirecting my career into voice over, while tackling various theatre projects and learning Japanese. I get stressed out (and thus anxious and thus a bit bleak) sometimes, but I also have something to look forward to.

Amanda Palmer likes to say “fuck plan B” by way of encouraging people to heed their calling. Basically, it involves not taking a day job to support one’s artistic habits, but to dive in and create without concern for pesky details like rent or health coverage. It’s a strategy so straightforward it risks being reckless and sloppy and plenty of folks, including friends of hers, have noted its short comings and unvoiced assumptions. Somehow you make your way…well, how? Parents pay for it? Or a spouse? Or you take on massive debt and potentially cripple yourself in financial, healthful, social and other dimensions? I could never have done it. When I graduated from college I was desperate for paying work, as I said, even if I could have just hung with my parents and let them pay my way while I figured what Step 2 was.

But while plan B helped me live on my own during the time I worked plan B, but it never worked out for me to get me anywhere else. Plan A had a critical problem in that I couldn’t figure out how to do shit without money. So this, then, must be plan C, a reiteration of plan A but with (hopefully) a better perspective and more carefully laid steps. An actual plan this time instead of a dream. A scheme to meet my responsibilities with skill and talent that make me happy to do the job.

This is how I consider voice acting – a means to an end. A little of column A and a little of column B. It’s made of the effort to make use of my theatre degree and the need to meet my responsibilities as an adult.

Yeah, I light up when I talk about theatre, about rehearsal, critical theory, dramaturgy, acting, staging, storytelling, all of it! It makes perfect sense when I admit it’s what I was supposed to be doing all along. And if I never* have to work in someone else’s cubicle farm to promote someone else’s products, where my pay is the sum total of my investment in that project, it’ll be too soon.

 

*Do I think I can turn down a handsomely rewarded temp office gig, should one show up? NO! I’m an adult, I have bills to pay. But dammit, it’s time to be clear about my goals.

Suzuki Style – Mad Stomping what Stomps

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Suzuki style is designed to fuck you up.” So said the Suzuki instructor Akiko Aizawa at the end of a training session. If I remember nothing else from training with SITI over a few weeks last September, I want to remember that. Of course, the ground was so fertile for laying ideas and observations, I hope I remember much more, but that comment beautifully sums up this technique I’ve only just learned.

 

I’ve been trying to articulate how the stances and movement of Suzuki force the actor’s body out into the open and demand such perfect focus that it leaves no where to hide. Our casual poses in everyday life let us hide behind our eyes, protect ourselves deep inside our hearts, to be at rest and think our way through every mundane situation. What I experienced in the training was being continually pushed out of my usual habits, especially dropping my head or my eyes, pulling up or rolling my shoulders forward and what I hope is just a Western habit of pushing out my butt when I move. When I let these habits slide I can nest in them and think about whatever I want in life: my bills, my chores, conversations I’ve had or want to have… When I have to correct them on the go and put myself through the Suzuki forms I don’t have time/energy – RAM – to think about anything but what I’m doing. Continue reading

Idling, Demo is a Go

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I’ve posted my commercial demo to the Audio page.  So long as I don’t think too deeply I like it.  It was a peculiar day when I got it back.

On first hearing the whole thing I really liked it.  Hell, to me, it sounded darned  professional!  I try not to get snowed by production & sound design.  That part had better sound good, considering what it cost and the big time reputation of my producer. But the part that I have to measure is my own performance, and  it’s the most important part of the demo, considering that, not the design, is what will get me hired.  And so, on first listen, I thought it worked.  Then I listened to it again and I was sure it was terrible.  I choked and wavered and just sounded weird.

After a quick little panic attack I remembered that I’m not the best immediate judge of my own work.  There was a reason I had aimed to solicit thoughts from pros and friends alike.  They would check my blind spots and give me a reality check.  And they did – even if asking five people got me seven or eight different opinions – I got some solid criticism and a satisfactory number of thumbs-up.

Squishy-but-true: I got to play my demo for my mom.  When it was done she turned to me with an impish smile and said, “hey that was good!”  It was then I realized that my mom hadn’t really seen or heard me perform since high school, quite possibly earlier (I really can’t remember).  She helped me out with my Theatre degree, she’s helping me with VO classes and some of my tools at home… but she doesn’t actually know what I can do.  Well, now she has an idea.  Still.  My mom like my demo.  That feels awesome.

Yep, I’ve been sitting on it, letting myself get distracted.  I don’t have much to say for myself on that front.  Just…don’t tell my mom ok?  I’m getting a move on, I promise.

Stripping – No, not like that

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Have you ever been working long and hard and get to the point that you should change your clothes and wash up but don’t quite want to because the fresh air and scrubbing feel like they’ll bring on an invasion to the mojo you’ve put together? Sure, it’s childish, but you earned that grit why not just press on?

It’s kind of felt like that over the last month and change.  I didn’t quite notice August slip by without blog updates, though I had started the month quite gung-ho about getting this site rolling.  I even paid for my own URL and everything.  But…stuff happened, like it does and I forgot to get back around to this, no matter that this blog is specifically for documenting such …uh…stuff.  But as time kept sliding by without writing anything of substance in public I found myself even more reticent to make the time.

Continue reading

New Wine, Old Friend

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I hadn’t seen T in a long time.  How long?  Long enough that his condo had accrued a layer of brightly colored plastic baubles and other loud toys that are safe for a toddler.  I still have not met this toddler, but her impact on his life is difficult to underestimate.

I usually pass on Italian wines.  I either can’t afford them or I find them…dull.  Well, that is, they’re generally quaffable. I don’t think I’ve ever tried an Italian wine that wasn’t at least “ok” but it seems to be quite the effort to find any that rise above mere table wine.  And look, there’s something to be said for a reliable drink that suits nearly any supper.  But the usual montepulciano or sangiovese is a bit awkward by itself; even a bit of cheese or chocolate won’t quite suffice to hide the fact that an Italian red is primarily refreshment to chase one’s meal.

So I can’t quantify the impact of a child (I won’t even try), but I wanted to properly contextualize finding a delicious new wine to appreciate. Colosi’s 2009 Nero d’Avola surprised the hell out of me. Really, I was figuring I might have to pour myself a small glass and leave it on the counter for at least an hour before it filled out to something I wouldn’t mind drinking while T and I got caught up.

It’s also a bonus on top of being a pleasant surprise from another friend.  First, it was her birthday but she gave me a present.  Second, even if she felt she owed it to me, I’d completely forgotten about the story of hers that I edited a while ago. Third, well.. remember that “wine snob” thing?  If I’m never given another bottle of Sutter Hill or Charles Shaw it’ll be too soon.  But hey, gainsaying that moniker was my lack of familiarity with nero d’avola.

At T’s house I offered the Colosi, I must say, without a lot of confidence.  That’s perhaps something more ingrained in my personality than I like to admit. It could be a wine, it could be a subject I’ve been studying, it could be my driving or my memory of a particular scene in a movie: I frequently find qualifiers in the information I’m giving if not complete statements designed to distance myself from representing what I just said with full faith and diligence.  Doesn’t really matter why, so long as I don’t try to compensate with over-confidence.  But my friends, good people that they are, breeze right past it.  And T and I dug into the nero d’avola and were readily impressed.

In a few ways T’s appreciation was the harder win – he’s not a big fan of red wines.  Likely the fact that Colosi barrels this nero d’avola in steel instead of oak contributed considerably to the initial pleasure, but T and I kept passing the bottle back and forth over a smoked gouda and later the orange chicken and mixed vegetables that made dinner.  It was such a pleasure that I forgot to leave a little for dessert – a bar of Swiss milk chocolate.  Now that’s saying something!

But back to old friends: It always struck me when I was a kid that my parents didn’t get out to see their own friends terribly often – and that’s without appreciating the scheduling contortions they had to go through to pull off visiting.  In a way it prepared me for the idea that adults can’t take friends and time spent with them for granted.  I saw my friends every day at school.  At college we lived a few blocks from each other and hanging out was a given.  Even the first couple of years after graduation it was easy enough to see each other.  But by and by chaos introduced itself to the system.  One friend had a child, another got married, another left the state for a job….  It’s the way things go, and it went on until I found myself hosting dinners in my tiny bachelor apartment just so I could see my friends.

It can be a little jarring to think of T as a family man.  I remember the guy in college with whom I stayed up late pretending to be vampires and pretending we were all bad ass because, well, that’s the kind of people we were…are…whatever.  We gamed, watched movies, traveled to events around the state attended by like-minded dorks, took care of our friends and generally grew up.  And I know first hand it can be a little jarring to look at one’s personal evolution and find not only embarrassment but pride that somehow, against all odds, we became the sort of reliable, upstanding folks society would call adults.  Well, T did anyway.  He got a whole private school to rely on his computer tech expertise, sought and earned an MBA, bought a condo, married his girlfriend and set about having a child.  Laid out in a sentence like that it sounds extremely simple, but anyone who’s ever attempted anything remotely like it knows no solid bullet point is made without a lot of hidden blood, sweat and tears.  I may stick to the highlights but it’s because T actually accomplished them.  I could be wrong, but I think that’s the definition of “respectable.”

Wine Pairing: vino y vida

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Long ago my friends learned that I will answer to “wine snob.”  It’s because it’s funny to me.  I’ve put a little bit of effort into knowing wines and over a dozen years that continual effort has turned into a moderate amount of knowledge.  It’s not like I’ve taken any classes, I’m lackadaisical about reading up on varietals or trends or such (the only critic I keep up with is the New York Times’ Eric Asimov and I usually skim his columns).  Even when I’m flush with cash I balk at paying more than $30 for a bottle unless it’s a knock out.  I’m well aware that my minimal efforts leave an extensive body of knowledge beyond what I know and that “real” snobs have a price point usually twice my line.

Nonetheless, I’ve become known as the one who brings wine to the party, wine to the hangout, wine to the dinner table.  For this my youngest brother once accused me of turning French.  Little did he know that my favorite offerings to bring with me to any old meet-n-feast is fine bottle of pinot noir (Schug maybe?) paired with some raspberries and blackberries, a creamy cheese (oh who am I kidding, brie) and a French roll.  Or maybe I’d make a meal of a heady zinfandel (just polished off a great Bogle, but Seven Deadly Zins will always be my go-to when I don’t want to think too hard), hard cheese (aged cheddar or smoked gouda), garlic crackers and maybe some salami – any zesty Italian dish works, really – and wrap the whole thing up with chocolate.

I’m not a dedicated foodie.  I’m don’t feel up to what I consider true connoisseurship.  I hesitate to even make rules for myself, knowing I’ll just break them because that’s what I do.  So even as much as I wish I could just eat food that I enjoy savoring and always avoid food that doesn’t meet this lone metric, I’m fine with tossing back a passable, cheap wine with a sandwich.  How about with pizza that tastes just like the cardboard box it came in?  Oh what the hell, as long as I didn’t pay for it.  But bad wine is bad.  Never order the wine at Sizzler’s.  Trust me on this one.  Life is way too short for crap wine.

Probably the least amusing assumption about me as a wine lover is that I mightn’t also like other alcoholic drinks.  I admit, I have a limited appreciation of bar drinks.  I know maybe a dozen mixed drinks that I like but I really don’t know most mixers.  I’d be an utter failure as a bartender.  However, I like scotch.  Perhaps even love it.  Not great for pairing but good for before and after meals and during any slow points in the middle.  But a few friends of mine have staked out the rich ground of scotch snobbery, so I don’t have to.  Thus I don’t like to say what expressions I like more than any others, but I have found I like a good Isle of Islay, say the Ardbeg, pretty darn well.  And further proving I’m not the scotch snob, I really like bourbons, appreciating the sweetness as well as low price.  Bulleit is as reliable as children losing balloons at the county fair.  Finally, I dig a good rum and it’s hard, maybe impossible to beat Pyrat.

It’s just, if I’m going to put it in my mouth I should enjoy it, I figure.  The only guidance I go by when it comes to figuring out what to drink next is a pair of questions: 1. Was that tasty?  2. Seconds?  Still, friends expect me to be ready with wine recommendations.  I don’t understand why.

I drank a lot of wine in 2007

Burbank-ing It Up

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The future is now. Not really. What’s real is that the future is an illusion I’m chasing,  a ballon resting on water out of my reach and all my splashing around is only pushing the ballooon further away.  The splashing, displacement, fustration & fun is what’s real.  True.  There’s no arrival, just work.  So this better be work I can and want to do.

Demo this morning.  Sleep deprived.  Only remembered after ordering lunch (post chai latte) that I promised myself I would eat better, do my damndest to lost weight, no more excuses.  Damn it. Just a couple more potato chips, that’s all, promise.  We’ll see about tonight. Off to M’s haus.  I should bring wine.  Cheese goes with that.  I should really eat a vegetable today.

This is now.  Really. The reality of the sun, a mundane yellow settling over the streets of Burbank.  And that’s just the truth.  If this place ever had any natural color – and I’m skeptical – it’s just about all washed away now.  This is normal.  This is what Burbank is in every membory I have, even counting that time it snowed (!!) last February.  Not just bright but flared out & painful to the unshaded eye.

It’s only convenient to drive around here.  Anywhere you’re headed next is inconvenient for walking – and mass transit? in Burbank? You may as well walk the whole way.  It’s just a few major streets perpendicular to each other where all the activity is.  Though you wouldn’t know it from the utterly dull brick or stucco facades.  Off the major arteries are sleepy residences, single family dwellings manicured with pride or at least neighborly pressure.  Were it not for these studios and pet furniture stores, martial arts dojos, microscopic strip malls which uniformly feature a smoke shop, doughnut shop and Subway, and the occasional Mexican restaurant, Burbank would just be a very expensive bedroom community.  Don’t be silly, you may say, there’s NBC, there’s Disney….  Yeah, looking over the 134 freeway like they’re waiting for their turn to merge onto traffic and head off to more exciting digs.

But no worries, Burbank was Burbank-ing it up long before I was born and I expect it to carry on long after I shuffle along.

That the’s the real thing.  The thing that isn’t defined by existing now, but defines now by existing. The hard concrete that only matters because of a history that promises a future.  You can’t bet on much, particularly anything as fickle or self-cannibalizing as the entertainment industry.  Well, okay, obviously you can, but you’d have to be an idiot to do it.  I should know.  But my point is simply that if there’s one phenomenon you can always bank on it’s the human need to dream out loud and furthermore the need, the compulsion to pull those dreams out of the context of imagination and future and create them here in the present, in reality where we can beat ourselves senseless on them.

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The above was written Monday August 1, 2011, at about noon.  I’ve edited it a little but haven’t updated it.  So you’ll just have to suffer with not knowing if I ever ate another vegetable.

Proceeding to the Track

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I have my producer.  He’s well recommended, and I really liked the samples on his Web site*.  He’s a trip. Outsized personality but an astute listener.  Obviously savvy about the business but patient with a newbie like me.  Extroverts who are big to the nth degree sometimes drive me nuts because it takes all my energy just to properly digest everything they’re going on about without losing myself.  It’s the rare extrovert-like-whoa who actually takes his own reins in hand and holds still so he can hear me.  I appreciate that like you wouldn’t believe.

He handed me a stack of copy to try for the demo.  I’m going through it, getting all the words in my mouth and trying out different voices to make the most of the pieces.  It’s a little like trying out different herbs or spices on the same dish until I think the dish is sounding, uh, tasting its best.  Staring at the copy leaves me feeling like I don’t know the first thing about voice work, hell, like I don’t know the first thing about acting.

The Internet is a big help here.  I certainly won’t always get a chance to learn more about a product and how they’re typically being presented before I get in the booth (though, like absolutely nothing else, pursuing voice over has convinced me I must get a smart phone ASAP).  But as long as I have the time to do some research, I’ll take it.  And it’s putting me in an odd state of mind, listening to alternate spots for various departments stores, cosmetics products, etc.  I know I can lay down work that’s solid enough to match the pros.  But do I sound like what the people who hire the pros expect?  If the potential client doesn’t think I sound like who they are, that’s the ball game.

 
I’ve managed to get past the “I hate the sound of my voice” part of listening to myself.  I said that by way of apology in an early VO class and almost immediately regretted it. It’s taken a bit of work to not just bite my tongue to avoid saying it but to actually work with what I heard even if it was startlingly different from the sound inside my own skull and furthermore different from that of the actors whose company I had hoped to join.  Ok, I don’t sound like the stars exactly.  I don’t sound precisely like the lady on the Maybelline commercials.  I sound like me and the things my voice can do are… fun.

I do like fun. <–Understatement of forever.  The more I do VO, the more fun I get to have.  There’s a lot of stress and pressure in my life to get this right.  But I don’t tend to feel it when I’m actually working.  Then I’m just doing what I do.  I mean, I’m trying to impress my teachers. I’ll be trying to impress casting directors and agents.  I’m trying to make sure I’m better than I was the last time.  But the fun in voice acting lets me focus, leaving no room to fret about bills or debts or politics.

My only worries are getting the job done right.  Am I ready to talk about myself like a pro?  Fuck man, am I ready to do a demo?  Yes.  Well, maybe not.  And also, sort of.  I read somewhere “Amateurs do it until they don’t screw up, pros do it until they never do.”  That means it’s all in doing it, working at it continuously.  Not stopping because it seems good enough.  It’s hard and it’s intimidating but the only antidote I can think of is to plow ahead, practice every day and fight for it.

The demo recording session is on Monday.

 

*More than a few producer sites I looked at were clean & tidy.  And there’s a lot to be said for a site that’s easy to navigate and won’t make my eyes bleed.  But producers have to show what they’re capable of.  No samples on the site, no consideration.  The producer I went with has a site that’s a bit of an eyesore. But I found the demo samples easily and loved them.

Wine and Sympathy

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The day had been warm, even a little muggy around sunset.  But by late night it was chilly out on the porch. M and I shrugged on coats that would have been unbearable when we were away from the porch.  We drank a crappy cabernet sauvignon – I had meant to bring quite a good pinot noir but had rushed out of the house without it – and chain smoked her Virginia Slims.  We blinked back tears.

We don’t get to pick our families but we do pick our friends.  Well, I guess.  I don’t think it’s a particularly conscious choice.  But we group up with people with similar…something.  Attitudes? Priorities? Outlooks?  Sometimes, but not always, I just end up hanging out with whoever invites me over.

Animals, though, don’t pick friends and their actual relatives are soon enough taken away.  Pets come into a home and adjust as they will.  A dog or cat warms up to someone each in its own way – or doesn’t warm up, each in its own way.  The pack tendency in canines makes it easy to see their relationships in a household.  Outsiders are judged individually for fitness as a part of the extended tribe.

Or at least, that’s how it felt with Ahab.  She barked the first couple of times that I came over. But the reactions of M and the others to me convinced her to stand down.  After that, when I came over she would run to the gate or the door to see me in. She didn’t jump into anyone’s arms or dance, she was far too dignified for that.  Though she made no secret of sniffing hopefully at any grocery bags.

Sometimes I would sit on the lower steps of the stairs to the porch, alone and lost in thought.  She would come up to me then, bring her muzzle close to mine and stare into my eyes.  It didn’t matter if I was just wandering inside my head, pointless poking at some esoteric idea, or if I was grappling with pain and anxiety, her huge gold-brown eyes would bring me to the present.  She waited patiently until my eyes locked on hers, until she knew we were present to the same moment.  Then she would lick my face.

At the HP Haus, what I call my forward operating base and my home-away-from-home, Ahab was notorious for a certain regal cuteness that somehow never put at odds her tendency to  beg for beer with her typical posture, alert to any threats to her pack.  She didn’t want anything to do with my wine, but boy would she give me Pleading Puppy Face for a bite of cheese.  One evening, not that long ago, M and I spent the evening over some wine, cheese and blackberries at one of the stone tables in the Haus’s backyard.  We sat catty-corner to each other, smoking and chatting.  Ahab sat between us, facing M. At every opportunity she gave M The Eyes.  When M would turn away would no response the brazen dog would reach a paw up and gently poke her.  After the second or third time M addressed Ahab directly telling her in no uncertain terms that she would not be eating human food, Ahab stood up, shifted around and repositioned herself facing me and redirected her begging to me.

The sweetness, the protectiveness, the I got your back-ness, the patience and occasional utter cheek are all attributes I’ll always think of as characteristic to the HP Haus. It’s a locus in my extended tribe.

I lean pretty heavily on M at times, because she invites me to do so, and because I have few other options.  It’s a tiny world and each one of us isn’t really that far away from any other one of us.  A toast, friendship, the bond of shared stories, a cool evening on a porch; these are worth relishing.  It all goes by too fast, otherwise.

I miss you, Ahab.  Thank you for letting me into your tribe.

Haus Guardian, Ahab

Throttling Drive

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It’s right over there, about five feet from me. It’s also online, a really easy Web search away. It’s called the Voice Over Resource Guide. I’m not getting up and getting it. I’m not searching for it. I’m sitting. Idling. Thinking about it, thinking about what’s in it, but not cracking it open.

As long as I don’t I’m hampered for looking up a producer for my demo. As long as I don’t I’m putting off looking for a producer. As long as I don’t have one I don’t have a demo. As long as I don’t have a demo I don’t progress into looking for VO gigs or agents. As long as I don’t take up this step I don’t face that I’m really doing this, billing myself a voice over pro swallowing any embarrassment and taking ownership of where I want my livelihood to come from. As long as I dodge responsibility I don’t have to be scared of the things I can or can’t do.

Just looking at it, just thinking about the Guide is making things a bit shaky deep inside.  Contemplating actually calling a producer…  I put off calling new people just because – it’s halfway habit and halfway nerves.  Add to those faint nerves the anxiety of convincing myself that it’s not laughable to call a producer, introduce myself as an actor getting into voice over, and ask for a conversation regarding potential collaboration.

Writing entries like this is like searching for a magic spell inside of me.  To date I’ve never found one.  The only magic to doing a thing is just doing it.  And just breathing through the anxiety attack that comes after.  At the very least I’ve earned the perspective that tells me panic is momentary.  Panic tries to give me the illusion that my whole world is shallow breathing, a quavering heart, recursive thoughts that chase their tails….  With perspective I’ve earned the lesson that my brain doesn’t always know what the hell it’s talking about.

I’m scared half to death and yet here I am writing (very slowly, trust me), ready to show off my anxieties and put my weakness on display.  It’s a bit contradictory, I know.  But full weeks have now passed where the first item on the to-do list has been “look up producers.”  I’ve been really sick of it.  It may be time to jump.  It’s not like anything bad will happen.