My window of time during which I might have become a commercial success as a working actor has closed. This is not a statement of fact, I’m stating what’s highly probable. The work, the fame and money, go to talent who have the credits. I've been a working actor all my life, but few if any of my credits are commercially substantial.
What works for me is a deep understanding of the choices I made when I was younger, why I made them, and what I wanted my career on stage to mean.
I am a man. In life, I inhabit many roles. My resume reads like an encyclopedia. I've played more roles than most men. I've lived to fullest extent possible, tried to. It was the right way, the honest way, for me to live. I lived in as many ways as I could, tempered only by my understanding of what was life-affirming. In biblical terms, I did not worship false gods.
I've always believed that civilization is marvelous but rather beside the point. Put another way, I wanted to observe and understand everything as best I could without prejudice, admitting my predispositions as I knew them. Understanding was my purpose in life. I might have taken more risks, but was never idle. I was busy gaining insight.
On my own terms, I’m a success. I have been the man I planned to be. My window remains wide open. The fresh air keeps me alive, the possibilities remain endless—at least until I end, perhaps even beyond if my legacy has any value.
I encourage my actor contemporaries to celebrate choices made, because they were made honestly.
And those of you who are young? If you make the right choices, you may achieve commercial success. I know what I wanted, what drove me.
What do you want?
Welcome
This blog is less than an experiment, and it isn't about anything.
It's about about-ness—the thing of the thing, not the thing itself.
Hence "meta"—what one thinks about what one thinks about.
And what one thinks about what one thinks about what one thinks about.
And so on.
Friday, August 30, 2013
A Successful Player
Labels:
behavior,
celebrity,
employment,
film,
growth,
hope,
legacy,
motivation,
old age,
philosophy,
self worth,
success,
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work
Monday, August 19, 2013
Time to Insight
I can’t regret what I did for computing, because computing has always helped me to think more clearly and live more openly.
A recent Microsoft marketing video reinforces, in a wonderfully abstract yet technical way, how state-of-the art data processing principles accelerate “time to insight”—what a lovely turn of phrase!
We could all improve our performance intervals from ignorance to insight, in relationships, in our art, in our work. The best uses of computing power enrich our lives by increasing our awareness.
A recent Microsoft marketing video reinforces, in a wonderfully abstract yet technical way, how state-of-the art data processing principles accelerate “time to insight”—what a lovely turn of phrase!
We could all improve our performance intervals from ignorance to insight, in relationships, in our art, in our work. The best uses of computing power enrich our lives by increasing our awareness.
Labels:
cognition,
growth,
perception,
relationships,
self worth,
time,
winning,
wisdom,
work
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Keeping Up with Oneself
I am naturally inclined to having a “big picture” mentality—witness
this blog. I seem to have countless
projects running in my head, countless more untethered ideas, vignettes of possibilities
that bubble up in my awareness which I often scramble to write down before they
pop into extinction, leaving a filmy trace of their promise.
Over time I have come to feel like I am not simply pursuing
my dreams, but am racing breathlessly after them as they recede. I’ve accomplished much, but so much more I
only imagine I complete.
I had a friend when I was in my twenties who wanted to be an
artist, a sculptor. He spent some of his
artistic energy collecting barrels of objects he imagined he’d one day make
into works of art. The rest of his time
he spent planning, specifically drafting plans, like an architect designing
structures. These two efforts left virtually
no time for building things, and when he’d occasionally attempt to do so he was
at once dissatisfied with the result and taken aback by the amount of time
making things actually required. He
decided, quite courageously I felt at the time, to stop attempting to make
art. He got rid of his barrels of stuff
and just drew his plans for all the pieces he’d never complete, arguably never
begin.
Our society emphasizes results and winning competitions, over
process and thought. We need things
done, of course, but we need to improve how we do them and, more importantly, more
fully consider what we’re doing in the first place and at milestones along the
way. A good software developer knows
that time spent in analysis reduces time spent in coding and testing. But we’re pushed to meet deadlines and have
become inured to continually returning to the drawing board to come up with the
next best thing, to produce new versions of everything from the latest couture
to the latest weaponry.
But I digress, as I so often do when related ideas burst in
my brain. My point, my original point,
was not to lament how our society stresses us to achieve, but to consider my
friend the (former?) artist and his solution to his dilemma, and how I find
myself barely able to keep up with my own plans, especially those plans which I
have not yet given up on completing.
So, considering my own dilemma, here are a few thoughts for
now:
I am losing the race to finish the things I’ve started. I am old enough to have physical file folders
the contents of which are yellow with age, and which I examine as if they were
gathered, written, composed by some ancestor of mine, not myself.
Instead of a “bucket list”—I have that in spades—I have a
list of projects I know I will never complete.
In the manner of my friend, I’m calling them done before they’re even
fully developed. I have made peace with
myself that I can’t do everything I propose to do.
I am considering exit strategies, ways to respect my ideas, my
accomplishments, my failures, my best intentions, so that the chaos of my
attempts at living well has more form to it—a theme, perhaps. Some of my impulse here is leaving a legacy,
I’m sure. But more immediately, I need a
better coping mechanism than chasing after illusions. I need to more realistically manage my
expectations, and this means continuing to improve on how I get things done,
when I can expect to complete projects, and whether I want to follow some paths
at all or not.
Maybe in simply writing this I’ve solved my dilemma, solving
it by identifying it as a meta-project, a project of projects, and admitting to
myself that catching up with myself is a task I’ll never complete.
Labels:
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experiment,
legacy,
meta,
old age,
perception,
philosophy,
questions,
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second thoughts,
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