go big or go bust

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 204 (grousing about wealth, success, massive recognition, feeling competitive and the Spice Girls)

If you're reading this, you're probably aware that I have a thing about success.  I see other people killing it with their work online and have a hard time getting past the old:  "But hey!  What about The Louise Log?" 

For better or for worse, I'm competitive.  And in spite of my attempts to tamp this monster down, it seems to be a part of who I am.  Massive recognition and financial compensation continue to be two of the elusive markers of success I really (really) want. *

So, naturally, I was grousing about this the other day in a room full of people and a financial adviser, who's friends with friends of mine, heard me.   She took me aside and practically stabbed me in the chest with her pointing finger. 

"Anne!  You have great wealth!  You have emotional wealth!  Passion!  I advise very wealthy people.  And a lot of them spend a great deal of money on very expensive vacations, traveling the world trying to feel passion.  Trying to feel!   You already have this, in every hour of every day!"

Hearing this hit me like a rogue wave, but in a good way.  It turned everything around.  And it made me feel grateful and made me see my situation in a new light.  I am successful.  I LOVE my life!  I'm doing what I want to be doing and even finding like-minded people online who follow what I'm doing.  I'm one of the lucky ones.  

*Spice Girls!

On set of The Louise Log #34 with Jennifer Sklias-Gahan

On set of The Louise Log #34 with Jennifer Sklias-Gahan



Go Big or Go Bust: Day 202 (on Steven Spielberg, the Sundance Lab, a boatload of family visitors and a Plan B)

I've read that Steven Spielberg gets his best ideas driving.  I apparently get mine working as a short order cook, chamber maid, and dish washer for a boat load of family visiting for the weekend. 

It's Sunday night, everybody's gone home and  I'VE GOT A PLAN B!  Sundance or no Sundance, it's all going to work out.  Thank you again for that tsunami of love showing me the way to accept that I have no control, to have faith and to LET GO. 

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 201 (Before & After telling the truth on Facebook)

How can I thank you for rallying around!. Your generosity and acceptance took me completely by surprise. 

There's an old saying: "A joy shared is doubled, a sorrow shared is cut in half."  Well, In this case, my baaad feelings were more than cut in half by your stories and encouragement.  I've never DARED to talk so openly about such a clearly miserable situation and never in my wildest dreams imagined that doing so on facebook would be the fastest route to getting through it.

I bow to you.  And I thank you.


Go Big or Go Bust: Day 199 (musing about the emotional life of birds while I paint the barn)

I was painting the barn this morning and thinking about last night.  We'd been at a friend's house for dinner and I was sitting next to a very successful sculptor.  She mentioned that she was having a hard time with small pieces, that big pieces are easier for her.  (And when she says 'big' she means 'huge'.)  And then she went on, that when she finishes the piece she's working on, she's going to go back to drawing.  The impression I got was that she was going to spend weeks, maybe months, drawing.

Her humility and her acceptance of the trouble she was having surprised me as did her solution to go back to square one.  This is a woman who has shown in the best galleries and been famous for decades.  And that she would talk so frankly about her difficulties moved me, especially because we'd only met one other time.

But aside from being inspired by her openness and her humility, her solution (to go back to drawing) made me jealous.  It's such a simple solution!  Everybody knows that drawing is the basis of visual art.  That's how I got started on the path to becoming an artist and that's what I did at the Beaux-Arts for years, learning to 'see'.  But never having gone to film school, I don't even know what would be the equivalent for a filmmaker.  And BOOM, the answer came flying at me: it would be listening. 

The next thing I heard was the birds above me, a combination of crows and pigeons.  And very quickly, more was revealed: there was a whiner in the group.  Most of the birds were going about their business, talking in a chipper or businesslike way while they got their worm breakfasts ... all except for this one bird.  He sounded like he was feeling very sorry for himself, the bird equivalent of moaning.  And he kept repeating his miserable moan, over ... and over.  And over.  All I could think of was his poor mother who must be embarrassed by his behavior but powerless to control or hide it.  Even if you sent a bird to his room-equivalent, everybody would still have to listen to him. 

And then it hit me that it's likely that birds (and most animals) live in a state of acceptance, that they probably don't even label this bird 'A Whiner'.  It's hard to imagine that they don't recognize that he's got issues, but it seems more likely that they're just "There he goes again."

As this seems to be coming at me from every angle, I'm going to take it as my homework for the day - work on *acceptance*.



Go Big or Go Bust: Day 197 (Lesson from the garden - self-confidence from potatoes and courage from a dream)

A number of weeks ago, I mentioned that I'd been down in the basement and the poor potatoes looked like Rapunzel without the benefits of gravity.  My gardening filmmaker friend Marian Evans (of Wellington, New Zealand) advised me to "Stick those spuds in the ground!" (something like that).  And so I did,  I went and dug six inch holes and stuck them in the ground with their 'eye stalks' pointing toward the sky.  These poor potatoes are left over from our crop last Fall and, try as we might, we hadn't gotten around to eating them.  By the summer, they were a little squishy and, as you can see, actively taking matters into their own hands.

early Summer

early Summer

I finally got around to planting them in early July and a week or so later, was thrilled to see what Marian must have know would happen.  The little stalks had turned green and were even sprouting tiny leaves.

July 11

July 11

Look at what's happened in the past three weeks.  One potato produces a whole bush.

Today, August 4

Today, August 4

Which brings me to the lesson I got from these potatoes: each one of us, potatoes included, has a yearning to do what we were brought to Earth to do.  And I'm moved by the faith of those potatoes in the basement.  They weren't getting what they needed even though they were giving all the signals that they were ready to get planted ... and still they kept on trying, growing, using up the energy of their potato selves to get to some sunlight.  (There are two very small windows in our basement, just enough to give you hope.) 

It reminds me of a night back in 1985 or 1986 when I sobbed myself to sleep after wailing to Mr. Green that I didn't know what to do anymore, if I was supposed to make a feature film, then okay!  I'll make it but I need money from somewhere.  (I'd been applying for and not-getting a lot of grants.)  Or should I give up on this artist/filmmaker idea and try to get a job in advertising or something?  Or should I devote myself to being a mother and have a whole bunch of kids?  I felt willing, I felt open and I felt desperate to know what I was supposed to do.. 

That night, I had a dream.  It was one  of those dreams which feels important, like a message.  I was in a 1950's type kitchen with a witch.   She wasn't good or bad, but she was powerful and forceful.  She commanded me to make the feature:  "Don't stop now!  You're almost there!

That dream gave me a powerful confidence to keep on going.  It wasn't easy and it wasn't finished til the Fall of 1989 but then the film, a feature starring Lea Floden as Louise, got into the Dramatic Competition at the Sundance Festival and the Panorama of the Berlin Festival and forever changed my life.

I'd love to have that kind of dream again.  The difficulty of this job of getting The Louise Log out to a larger audience has me doubting if I should be devoting any more time to it.  On the other hand,  it feels like that's what I'm supposed to be doing.  And then I think of what those potatoes had been going through from January to June.  I bet they had their doubts. 

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 196 (Neither rain nor thunder nor crickets... with Everett Quinton and Marie Christine)

Another day killing it here with this highlights reel.  Three thunderstorms and a cricket (who in the meantime has moved in his whole darn extended family) have made it challenging to do the voice-over...  BUT.  We persisted and the reel is practically ready for sound editing!  I'll be splitting the tracks in the morning.

Screen Shot 2015-08-03 at 7.29.35 PM.png

In gratitude for your patience, here's a screengrab from the highlights reel featuring the father-in-law everyone wants, Ethelred Black, brought to life by the brilliant and irrepressible Everett Quinton.  Behind him is the lovely (beleaguered) director of the Tarzan and Jungle Girl movie, Marie Christine Katz.  

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 194 (the 'dead' line)

Okay so I didn't make the deadline.  Fortunately it wasn't an actual 'dead' line and I'm not going to die (GOD WILLING).  Or maybe it's because you crossed your fingers for me.  Thank you for that!

The fact is that I could have made it but it wouldn't have been as good as it could be.  With a few more days I'll be able to improve on some things that will actually matter in the long run.  

Keeping this short so I don't lose focus. 

Happy August!

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 193 (What I dreamed last night)

I was in the front part of a ho-hum grocery store, possibly in Chinatown.  The ceiling was low, it was clean but not at all fancy and there were lots of regular NYC people shopping, young, schlubby, a mixed group.  Before I could even go in to start shopping, someone asked me about The Louise Log.  It very quickly turned into something like a Q & A but with people giving testimonials about how much they love the show and identify with the characters.

I'm, naturally, having a total heart attack of joy.  I LOVE YOU PEOPLE!  You are justifying everything about me and my whole life! 

And then someone asks if I have a card, and I'm relieved to discover a handful of business cards in my pocketbook.  But it turns out that some of them are only a portion of a card, the wrong shape and with only partial information on them as if they were cut improperly by the printer.   I throw those back in my pocketbook and hand out the whole ones to anyone who wants them.  I

'm practically dying with happiness but trying to keep cool.  I resist shouting, "DO YOU KNOW HOW MUCH THIS MEANS TO ME??  DO YOU KNOW THAT THIS IS JUST ABOUT THE HAPPIEST DAY IN MY WHOLE LIFE??? (next to the birth of my kids, you know, that level of stuff which could compete).  I resist throwing my arms around every single person looking my way.  (Of course some are just shopping and not paying attention.  Naturally.  As life must go on and this is New York City.)

The manager of the grocery store comes over to me.  I know he's the manager cause he's pushing a broom.  He's stocky, handsome and looks like he might be East Asian.  He smiles at me and mentions that he's already 'sexing' every day and if he watches the show, he'll probably need to even more.  He gives me a lecherous smile which, naturally, totally freaks me out so I give him a very bright smile and say, "Well, if you watched the show you'd know that I'm a happily married woman!"

 

 

 

 

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 192 (on not getting enough attention as a child, power outages and a very noisy generator)

Once upon a time, my total m.o. was in trying to get an 'A' for effort.  I hated actually *working* but became somewhat of a specialist in making it look like I was trying really hard.  Not that I ever did much besides pretend.  Hey, we were a lot of kids very close in age growing up.  Maybe I needed the attention. 

Our first trip to Europe: Rome.  Note I'm the one out in front, looking like the tour guide. 

Our first trip to Europe: Rome.  Note I'm the one out in front, looking like the tour guide. 

Or maybe, as one of my own children (at the age of five) accused me, I'm "just mean.  And LAY - ZEEE."  

On the other hand, nobody wants to be normal and that word 'dissociated' sounds so post-modern and existential.  Maybe that's what I was. 

Whoops.  Just looked up 'dissociated personality' in the Oxford Dictionaries which says it's another term for *multiple personalities*.  Let's drop this. 

What I was trying to get at is that it feels like I'm suffering from a hangover of that childhood behavior today: I like everybody to know how hard I work.  It's embarrassing to admit.  Some people like to pretend that everything just happens with a wave of the hand.  I'm way over on the other end of the scale wanting everybody to ... what?  Feel sorry for me?  Be in awe of my stamina?  Give me a break on any success cause, heck, she's killing herself! 

So here I am scrambling to finish this darn HIGHLIGHTS REEL

I fear you're sick to death of all my yammering on about it but anyway, last night we had the second power failure in three days.  The first one was at midday, last night's ended at midnight.  Your guess is as good as mine as to the cause because you can do all the twitter searches you want about "power outage upstate NY"  to no avail.  As Mr. Green shouted to me in the dark (over the generator of the people across the road)  I'm probably the only person in a ten mile radius on twitter.  If that. 

And so today, rather than wringing my hands in bed when I woke at four in a panic, I got up and went over to my studio.  (Did you catch that?  I got up at four.)  It wasn't long before Mother Nature proceeded to unleash the loudest crash BAMM thunder and lightning storm (with torrential downpours) for hours.  We didn't lose power but, hello, guess who's still not finished with her bloody highlights reel.  My tech support friend called tonight from the plane, on his way to go camping in Yosemite. Our sound editor is leaving Sunday but (I think) holding Saturday open to do the job if I can get done in time.  

How are you supposed to record Louise's inner voice over a chorus of crickets that would drown out Times Square?  I'm going to bed.  Tomorrow is another day. 

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 191 (on making standard def video look like hi-def and inspiration from Alvin Ailey)

I spent a very long day bent over my keyboard trying to get Standard Definition files to look high definition.  It *may be* possible.  Looking at this picture makes me feel hopeful and it makes me feel stronger.  It's all about faith.  

If I get up very early tomorrow, there's a chance of finishing and getting the reel to Laura Hanna for sound editing.   Please cross your fingers. 

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 190 (on Final Cut 7, my dear old imac and the beach ball of death)

The way things have been going, it was starting to feel like this darn highlights reel might Never get finished.  The job of conforming a high-quality version to the workprint isn't exactly a fun job but, in this case, it was a high-stakes melodrama and not in a good way. 

My old imac, the computer on which I cut Seasons 1 and 2, is on its last legs. The last few times I used it, the beach ball of death was my constant companion for even the most simple routine jobs like opening Text Edit, or clicking on Finder.  Every little thing took twenty-five minutes.  And so my dear old friend had been retired to its box for the past year.  I've been dreading that I might not be able to get my hands on any high quality tape at all from Seasons 1 and 2 without forking out a thousand dollars for another version of Final Cut 7 and then going through the arduous job of installing it, all for one day's work. 

But the sun was shining on my little studio today.  My old computer was as snappy and fast as the day I bought it.  (Maybe it was the car ride up from the city?  To my horror, Mr. Green had packed it into the car lying on its side...)  I think the hard part of the job is over. 


Go Big or Go Bust: Day 189 (on The Power of Less ... or is it my astrology?)

As a young artist, I was fixated on improving my mind.  To say I'd had an undistinguished academic career would be an understatement.  I'd been a jock and a self-styled Miss Popularity and, on these strengths, (to my surprise) barely made it into college.  Only the panicky thought of wearing pantyhose under fluorescent lights (as someone's secretary) motivated me to get with the program and try to learn something.

Screen Shot 2015-07-27 at 7.30.17 PM.png

A 'D' on my first paper in Mr. Pearce's 'American Literature 101', accompanied by a comment along the lines of: "You can't write." sent me running to the one strength I knew I had - visual memory.  And so I majored in Art History.  I loved looking at art, dates and names stuck to images in my brain and I did well.  But by senior year it was clear that, not having the math skills for architecture school or the demeanor for a museum job or academic life, my choices were narrowing.  The only thing I really loved and was good at was drawing.  I remember making the decision then and there in the early Spring of senior year: I'd work at mindless jobs to support myself and devote my whole energy to being an artist.

The fact of being pretty much uneducated was a thorn in my side.  I read slowly and with rare exceptions before graduating from college, would fall asleep as soon as I opened a book. 

A famous older artist took me under his wing when I was in my mid-20's.  He introduced me to the work of European conceptual artists and gave me books: an anthology of modern philosophy ("Very gossipy") and novels by Paul Valéry and Polish authors with unpronounceable names.  Somehow I came upon Wittgenstein's Blue and Brown Books and became obsessed with it, reading it over and over, shredding the binding. 

This mentor was a bonafide workaholic and bragged about having been in his studio every day all day since his early 20's. Whenever he asked what I was working on, I cringed as my 'work' was generally trying to come up with 'a more brilliant idea' than whatever had occurred to me and so was pretty much always working on 'nothing'. 

One time, buoyed by Wittgenstein, I answered his challenge saying I was trying to do only what I was doing.  As a telephone receptionist at Cinelab, a 16mm reversal lab in midtown Manhattan, I was mostly answering the phone.  There were fluorescent lights and a terrible chemical smell in the air but at least I could wear jeans.  Five buttons for five phone lines were the focus of my days and I was trying to be present, to be aware of the mouthpiece, the cord and to the conversation with the messenger service or the filmmaker checking on her job.  I didn't have the nerve to say it but I was definitely trying to get to the existential truth of my life.  I expected to get a look of disapproval from my famous mentor and still remember my surprise at his hearty approval.

Until reading The Power of Less, I'd forgotten all about this practice.   But today, I'm eating and only eating (when I'm eating alone) not scrolling through my phone, reading a paper or eating at my desk as I continue to work.  It feels like a life of indescribable luxury to be released from the internal pressure to cram as much activity as humanly possible into every minute.  I figured I'd feel resentful, that I have so much to do cause I want to Go BIG.  Instead, life feels richer, fuller.  And I feel HAPPIER.  Clearer.  Is it possible this is the result of letting go and simply doing less?  Or is it something about my astrology this summer?  I suspect both. 

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 188 (on the chaos of a web series edited by someone learning Final Cut 7 and X and spread over eight years of hard drives)

Mr. Green isn't showing me any sympathy at all.  He has his challenges with the lawn mower and his top-secret-chemistry projects.  (Nothing like Breaking Bad, I assure you.)  But how I would like to have some 1920 x 1080 files to work with, some consistency and order instead of this chaos.  Mr. Green loves to quote Emerson to me: “Consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds.” 

This is what I'm dealing with in assembling the elements for the *highlights reel*.  And instead of writing, am going with the old  'picture is worth a thousand words'.   Look ... and weep

This took two days.   Note the various, less than ideal sizes of the elements. 

This took two days.   Note the various, less than ideal sizes of the elements. 

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 187 (on meditation, weeding the garden, difficult men, spicy food and Global Domination by The Louise Log)

Weeding the garden for one hour in the morning is my new meditation.  Of course I prefer the no-tools method so I can feel the resistance of the roots giving way and 'win' hundreds of times before 9AM.  There's something inexpressibly satisfying about weeding this way but my obsession with it decommissioned my right arm last summer with 'tennis elbow'.

So I was motivated to be open to the advice of a professional gardener: she recommended using a hoe which is not nearly as satisfying but a lot faster.  As I whacked the weeds with a hoe the other morning, I pondered why the easier softer way (the hoe) doesn't appeal to me.  Words from forty years ago filled my head.  A fellow student at the Beaux-Arts weighed in on the subject of my disastrous love life: "Anne, tu aimes les plats épicés?"  (trans: "Anne, do you like spicy food?")

I remember being annoyed at her suggestion that my attraction to difficult men was just one manifestation of an integral part of my character.  But it's funny that this line has stuck in my craw lo these decades.  Maybe it explains my fixation on taking a popular but obscure micro-budget web series from its audience of thousands to global domination.  I haven't given up.

That's dirt splattered on my face and hands.

That's dirt splattered on my face and hands.




Go Big or Go Bust: Day 186 (On procrastination, Freud, Patsy Cline and a used two drawer file cabinet)

Much as I want to get this highlights reel finished, there's one more way in which I could reasonably procrastinate. 

Pegeen told me that for maximum effectiveness your desk should be 80% free of clutter.  Since learning this, I've been aware of how much easier everything is with a cleared-off desk.  So any logical person might wonder: "What effect could a concentration of chaos in the corner of my office have on my life and work?"

The way I see it  A) you spend a great deal of energy pretending it doesn't bother you  B) you quote Freud to yourself and everyone who'll listen: “There’s denial, and then there’s insanity.”  or C) you go to the local used-office equipment store and score a barely scratched file cabinet for a very good price and proceed, with a Bridget Jones aura of superiority, to  P-R-O-C-R-A-S-T-I-N-A-T-E.

If Patsy Cline were still around, she'd write me that for my theme song. 

(Special thanks to Jacqueline Cioffa for the Freud quote which I discovered in her piece on feminine collective.)

A chipmunk got loose in here a few days ago.  In other words, anything could happen if I don't immediately take control of this situation. 

A chipmunk got loose in here a few days ago.  In other words, anything could happen if I don't immediately take control of this situation. 

I feel your shiver of horror. 

I feel your shiver of horror. 

Victorious, on my way to establish order.

Victorious, on my way to establish order.

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 185 (on a web series highlights reel, Final Cut Pro, procrastination and Mr. Green)

I'm not the most hi-tech person who ever walked the planet and the next job on the agenda is to build the cut of the 'highlights reel' in the most high-quality files possible.  I'll say it right out that this would be a a daunting job for anybody: I learned to cut video under deadline pressure on three different softwares, two of which are no longer available.  Combine that with my marginal impulse control and you have a mess spread over ten+ hard drives. 

So naturally, I've procrastinated to the limit with plugging in the old Lacies, Western Digitals and G-Drives Here's a shot of me caught in the act with my last delaying tactic: the wall calendar.  The three month plan.  Until the darn highlights reel is ready, there is no three month plan.  Nuff said. 

Or so I thought.  My roving photographer, Mr. Green, offered to give me a deadline.  When I practically bit his head off, he apologized: "I'm sorry I said anything."  I don't think he is sorry.  I think he just knows which side his bread is buttered on. 

Go Big or Go Bust: Day 184 (a more recent story about serotonin and my co-writer and husband Mr. Green)

I've always marveled at how life comes through with inspiration for how to solve artistic problems.  Whether it's snatches of dialogue overheard on the street or plots lifted from life,  my experience is that answers are more readily available outside of my head than in it. 

After yesterday's little backstory on my early days with Mr. Green, I thought you might be interested in a more recent story which may explain why he's my co-writer and inspiration. 

Mr. Green teaches Organic Chemistry to undergraduate and graduate students.  He used to also do basic research.  I never took science beyond high school biology and am generally less than ignorant about the workings of the natural world.  It's very convenient to be married to  Mr. Wizard.  For the past ten or more years, Mr. Green has written a syndicated (and here) monthly blog which decodes science for non-scientists on subjects likes fracking, the causes of and cures for depression, global warming, etc.

As Mr. Green searches through journals for fresh topics, he tries the ideas out on who ever is in the house.  I'm usually in the house and if not, I'm not far.  I'm also always under pressure to spend more time on twitter, to make more skit videos, to clean the house, etc.  

The other day, Mr. Green was on fire about serotonin, the subject of this month's post.  Did I mention that my husband has been a professor for almost fifty years?  We were finishing up lunch and I could tell that he was just getting going, that he had absorbed a lot of material and that I might not get anything done for the next half hour if I didn't make my move.  At the end of his sentence, I nodded emphatically as I sprang to my feet, practically shouting  "Really interesting!" and bolted for the door.  I unconsciously used a trick I'm aware of for holding onto myself and not getting sucked into other peoples' agendas: I didn't look my husband in the eye.  Or maybe I did but for just a fraction of a second.  The image that stays with me is of his face in shock.

Within fifteen minutes, there was a knock on my studio door.  Mr. Green looked amused: "You left in the middle of the lecture!  I've never had to chase a student down to finish a lecture!"


Go Big or Go Bust: Day 183 (When a psychic predicted that Mr. Green (my current co-writer) would become my husband)

Years ago, decades ago in fact, I went to see a psychic who lived and worked out of his apartment in Riverdale in the Bronx.  He'd been recommended by my psychic friend Julia Wolfe so I knew I was going to get my money's worth. 

His name was M.B. Dykshoorn and, having lived for most of his life in The Netherlands, he spoke with an accent.  The walls of his office were covered with plaques from police departments around the world in recognition of the crimes he'd helped to solve with his psychic powers.  He wore a dark suit and we sat (when he sat) in black leather chairs like at a shrink's office.

I'd recently decided that I wanted to have children and so was intent on getting married.  The central problem was that I didn't even have a boyfriend.  Mr. Dykshoorn assured me that I would meet my future husband within eighteen months and that he'd be from 'across the water, probably the UK'.  He also mentioned that this man would be a film producer.

About a year later, I met Mr. Green.  Because he was a scientist/professor and not a film producer, I wrote him off as 'not the guy' and wasn't even sure I wanted to waste time going out with him.  My friend Nicki advised me to "Date, don't mate."  Have some fun, get out of the pressure-cooker.  She convinced me that if I didn't loosen up with the earnest search, I'd blow any chances that came my way. 

Within six weeks Mr. Green won my heart over and went on to help produce my feature How To Be Louise, and to co-write The Louise Log.   Though Mr. Dykshoorn had predicted that he'd be from 'across the water, probably the UK', Mr. Green was living across the East River in the then obscure enclave of Williamsburg.

In case you missed the closest thing we've ever had to a viral video, here's one (3:10) about my experience of crowdfunding which amassed over 900 views in less than a day and prompted Emily Best to tweet: "Get this man an agent".  (She was referring to my co-star Mr. Green.)