Tuesday, October 28, 2014

Expectations - 3 Quotes I Can Relate To




Expectations.  Are they a big set up for a big let down or are they justifiable? 

“If you expect nothing from anybody, you’re never disappointed.”

“Would you like to know your future?
If your answer is yes, think again. Not knowing is the greatest life motivator. So enjoy, endure, survive each moment as it comes to you in its proper sequence -- a surprise.”
         
“When you stop expecting people to be perfect, you can like them for who they are.”
         
Oof.  I relate to all three of these. 
Sylvia Plath’s idea seems so dismal but I have had the experience so often of expecting someone to either perform or deliver or show up and been let down.  I think it’s part of life for things not to work out but it’s how I react that makes it painful.  I have been known to take things personally only to be shown that circumstances were not in anyone’s control and so things didn’t work out the way I “planned” it or that they just weren’t meant to be.  I get resentful and hurt; it’s a knee jerk reaction with me.  Now, intellectually I know that this does no good.  I know that my expectations are sometimes way to high or I count on someone else’s a little too much to deliver my satisfaction but the feeeeeling is that God hates me or I am worthless, why even try.  I have to admit, that happens less and less the older I get but then, I have been through this a lot.  That’s so hilarious to me!  Yep…I’ve been burned.  I now know that I just need to do my own work and leave the expectations of others alone.  I do not get upset if things don’t work out my way because maybe the other way is even better…or at least different.

The fact is Vera Nazarian’s quote works for me.  I like the way things unfold.  I like the path.  I like not knowing. I like doing the footwork anyway.  It’s been my experience so far that Vera’s idea is the most honest path in my business.  Yes, I do have responsibilities and other people counting on me but the things I can control are – showing up on time, being prepared, coming from a loving and kind place and doing what I said I would do.  

Donald Miller, you’re statement hits home with me.  Who am I to demand perfection in someone when I am imperfect too?  That’s a laugh.  In my last blog I talked a lot about jealousy and judgment. These are also traits I am not proud of.  They are bourn out of fear.  I think a lot of artists no matter how highly evolved or successful still have a modicum of fear.  Um yeah, could that be because they are under intense scrutiny not only from press, fans, peers and the media but their own perfectionism? Am I so rigid in having my ideas expressed and attended to by others that a mistake is a major assault on me personally?  Do I then eye you with great disdain and add on a label of ineptness?    Geeze…oh how I have failed over and over and not lived up to others’ expectations…I am sure of it.   How could I hold a different standard to you than of myself? 

Oof again.  Lessons need to be learned.   Humility needs to be in place.  Acceptance is the key.    My head: “Oh yeah? Go F Yourself!” I am a work in progress I guess.

I am striving in my classes to let people know the truth about the Voice Over Business, to strive to be better and then the best and to help other people learn and grow too.  Being the best is not an expectation it’s a goal.  Helping others, well I need to get out of my own personal cheering section of a head and do something for someone else once in awhile.  In my experience perfection doesn’t exist no matter how hard I try to make it happen or believe it will but the journey towards creating something good and human in my art is the most satisfying, exciting thing I have ever experienced.  I CAN expect that journey to be almost perfect.

I’m no expert but this is how I feel.


Wednesday, October 15, 2014

4 Ways I'm Trying Not to Be Jealous

As a musician, I deal with rejection all the time.  Not everyone likes what I do or the kind of music I play.  It's what that rejection does to me that matters.  It's how I perceive that rejection or judgement that matters.  It's all about how I compare myself to other people.  Ugh.  This is the most useless thing I have ever bought into!  I've heard it said that "judging your outsides by my insides" is a trap of self obsession.  As a voice over director, I have seen people destroyed by some teacher or casting director and let their work suffer from an opinion that was hurtful to them and being jealous of another's success.  I have also seen the disappointment when dreams don't come true on someone's time schedule and plans of fame and fortune are postponed. So, today I want to talk about how I, as a creative person deal with this stuff and maybe throw in a little advice too.

Here are the reasons I still create and try not to buy in to my judgments.

  1. SUCCESS? As someone who at one point in my life never thought I would make music at any level again,  I am successful!  I got a late start making records but I have made 3 and am in the middle of #4.  Success to me is that - I write songs, people want to play their instruments on these songs for low pay and a sandwich and I am fulfilled.  Occasionally, I have a song placed in film or TV or another artist wants to record it but the true success is in the creating. I have to do it.
  2. I HAVE TO DO IT  I need to create stuff and I need to be around other people who do that too.    When I am in my studio alone, I have ideas to improve my classes, my demos, my webinars (coming soon) and my music.  I may have other things to do but I always take time out to try new things.  I have learned to call people, complete strangers to ask them how they did things and what it did for them as an artist. If I don't investigate I can't let it go.  If I don't try new things, I am stuck.  If I don't have relationships with other artists, I am nowhere.
  3. MY INSIDES vs. YOUR OUTSIDES You're not making a six figure income from your art, you are not sipping cocktails on your private island contemplating your take over of the world. Directors and Producers are not pounding on your door and your publishing deal is nonexistent.  None of that matters.  When someone's success story inspires you, that matters.  Be the person you are meant to be and don't get trapped in what you think you need to be happy in life.  You may find out that what you want and what you need are two different things.  If you have a "day Job" you hate (I have had a few), plan your escape and at some point, jump off the cliff.  If you don't grab for a branch on the way down, you will know freedom upon landing.  It might not look like what you thought it would but there is relief and "the next indicated step" towards a fulfilled, artistic life.
  4. CONGRATULATIONS!  I try to feel good about someone's else's success.  I try.  It is good for the universe, it is good for the collective artistic minds around me and it is good for my ego to say Congratulations!  I have to learn over and over that jealousy equals misery, that fear and anger over what I don't have equals being stuck right there and that genuine support and happiness for someone else's successes actually helps me learn, makes me feel good and provides me with inspiration in my work.  
I am no expert, as you can tell but I try…oh I try.