The Game Of Life

Instead of looking at life as one problem after another to be solved, what if you looked at it as one long, infinite game to be played?

The goal?…To play it for as long as you can and play it as well as you can.

If we do this, then life becomes so much more exciting and enriching and fulfilling. We never stop growing, never stop learning, never stop having fun.

What a great life!

So, what’s holding you back? Start playing.

Just Right

For the actor…

As you’re working on the character, it’s important to fully explore both extremes. Go all the way to one pole and all the way to the other pole More often than not, that middle ground will be just right.

Let yourself experience “too hot.” Let yourself experience “too cold.”

Then, you will really know what “just right” is like and you can live in that space.

P.S. – A great note to give yourself is “split the difference.”

How To Keep “The Black Dog” Away

Feeling blah? Not sure what to do? Wanting to keep “The Black Dog” (aka Depression) from visiting you?

Stop thinking and start working. Especially something physical.

How about bricklaying? It worked for Winston Churchill (his daily regimen was “200 bricks and 2000 words”) and it can work for you.

P.S. – This article.

All In?

Here’s the thing about going all in…

You have no idea if it will work.

There is no turning back.

You must throw your cap over the wall.

And the people, things and events you truly need to materialize for your success don’t actually show up until you’re all in. It’s blind faith.

So ask yourself, are you really all in?

No Turning Back

The road ahead to your desired destination will most assuredly not be straight.

It will be filled with all kinds of twists and turns that you didn’t anticipate. There will be long stretches where you will lose sight of the road or other stretches where you will feel like the road never ends.

You will feel like giving up and going home, especially because that road back is very clear and easy to navigate.

But don’t.

Don’t turn back.

Be a rock. Don’t roll.

Onward brave one. Forge ahead!

Artistic Work Is Sacred Work

Artistic work isn’t for everyone. It requires total focus and concentration on the task at hand. You must shut everything out. Eliminate all distraction. Treat this work and time as precious, sacred, consecrated even.

Some excerpts from Mary Oliver’s Upstream: Selected Essays that reinforce this principle (h/t to Maria Popova’s always excellent Marginalian blog for inspiring).

Answer The Call

If you’re fortunate to receive the call to do creative work, you must answer it.

Otherwise it will haunt you the rest of your life.

Go make your art.

Preparation

To be effective in any scene or entire play, the actor must know (a) what they want, (b) why they want it and (c) what obstacles stand in their way.

Sounds simple enough.

And it is. Provided you do massive prep work beforehand to figure out the answers to these questions. If you don’t?…Well, good luck.

Note: This isn’t just for actors. Anyone looking to accomplish anything would be wise to heed Stanislavski’s advice.

Nostalgia

The word nostalgia is derived from two Greek roots: “Nostos” meaning homecoming or return to one’s native land. “Algos” meaning pain, grief, or distress. Originally, the term was used to describe a severe, sometimes fatal medical diagnosis of extreme homesickness, specifically among Swiss mercenaries fighting far from the Alps. Over time, it has evolved into an emotional longing for a past time, place, or experience rather than a physical location. And thanks to capitalism and the rapid, modern transformation of our society, we are particularly susceptible to longing for simpler times.

The cure?

Gratitude for the past. But then, letting it go so that we can be wide open and available to the present.

The below poem “Weeds” by Diane Suess helps us with this:

P.S. – Hope you had a great and relaxing Memorial Day. Speaking of, read this great poem “Ode For Memorial Day” by Paul Laurence Dunbar. While it was written in 1896 and is about the Civil War, it pays tribute to all who gave their lives in service to our country.