Sun 5 Apr 2009
A Too-Honest Post That You Should Skip If You Want To Go On Liking Me, or, All Actors Are Insecure
Posted by Alissa under CA ensemble retreat '09 , Have I said this before? , Insomnia , Omphaloskepsis , Theatre[4] Comments
There’s a point, reliably, in every show that I’ve ever worked on in which I realize that not only am I a total fraud as an actor and/or writer, but all of my collaborators know it too, regret including me, and are simply not mentioning it to me in order to avoid hurting my feelings.
I’m told that this is common, and that it is a delusion. I’ve read books about it and heard the stories of wildly successful and brilliant people who claim to have a similar experience. But in my case, tonight, right now, I’m certain it’s accurate.
Of course everything I believe about making art supports the idea that how “good” I am at it matters not at all. The ideal Alissa doesn’t care about that and goes ahead and does what she wants to do anyway, and keeps trying to make better art. But the real Alissa gets her feelings hurt at her companions’ perceived belief that she’s the weak link.
This is not something I particularly like about the real Alissa. I’m pleased to say that at least the real Alissa does keep going and trying to make better art, even if occasionally she wonders if her time would be better spent doing something she could make progress at, instead of continuing to bash her uninspired, unenlightened head against a door that will never, ever open, or at least not often. But somewhere in my childhood the value of perseverance was successfully instilled, so. Here I am. I’ve been in theatre continuously since I was nine years old. Almost twenty years.
I really ought to be good at this by now.
I’m writing this mostly to get the demons out, to shame them into nonexistence by shining the light of the public consciousness on them. I do not want a flood of emails from you, my beloved family and friends, telling me that I am not a fraud. If I’m in this mood, I won’t believe them, and if I’m in a more balanced mood, I won’t need them. But I do sort of want an email or two that says: hey, I feel that too sometimes.
Am I alone out here? Oh, God, I might be. That would be really embarrassing.
The sad thing is that the real glory of theatre is totally separate from all this what-other-people-think-of-me, how-good-I-am crap. But it’s buried underneath, and just now the pile seems so high and thick that I can’t see the pure shiny stuff hiding at the bottom. I don’t know when I’ll ever see that again. I can’t tell if I’m lying to myself that I ever saw it before.
I’m pretty sure I’ll stop feeling this way at some point before the show is done. I’m equally sure that I will feel this way again during the next show I work on. I think maybe the work I have to do in this life is to accept this feeling, allow it to be part of me forever, and keep going. I think trying to make the feeling go away makes it worse.
It makes me think of one of the stories of the fall of Satan. (Thanks, Jason, for telling me this one. I still have your book.) In what I think is a Sufi version, God made the angels first out of His divine love. He told them that they were second only to Him, and that they should bow to nothing else in creation. Then God made man, and, apparently forgetting or revising His former edict, told the angels that they were second to man, and should bow to man as well.
Satan’s love for God was so powerful that he couldn’t bring himself to bow to man. He wanted to remain faithful to God’s original command, and, being made of a part of God himself, could not subject that sliver of God to a creature of clay. God, not known for respecting fiddly arguments like that or really anything other than immediate obedience, cast Satan from Heaven.
To Satan, Hell consists of separation from God’s love.
I’ve lost track of theatre’s love. I don’t know whether I disobeyed some command—perhaps it was Thou Shalt Not Care What Other People Think. But I’m feeling a little banished today.
Anyway. The project’s going well. I really like our play.
Yours in exile,
Alissa
The most interesting thing for me about this feeling seems to be that it comes and goes without apparent regard for how well the project is going. I can be in a situation where from any external viewpoint, one would think that the show had all the marks of success, but in the moments of insecurity, I would be sure that all this was due to the other performers’ achievements, and I was just holding people back. Conversely, I can have had a terrible rehearsal, in which lines, blocking and the ability to pretend all seem to have abandoned me, and walk away from it knowing I just had a bad day and tomorrow will be awesome. Theatre is a lot like a relationship. Emotional insecurity is just a symptom of being emotionally invested. (And while that’s not ideal in either, I think it practically inevitable.)
Alissa, a lot of what you’re feeling about your acting, I feel about my writing. I’m often afraid to put an idea to words because I don’t think anyone else will like it, or it will be too similar to something already written. Even if I like my work, I’m afraid it will be pretentious, or self-serving, or complacent. And I usually see my failures much more harshly than anyone else does. You’re not alone.
I do not personally get Impostor Syndrome (yet!) thought I have known many people who do, so you’re not alone there. But my take on your post is a bit different.
I have been designing and implementing programming languages professionally for over twelve years; I too ought to be good at it by now.
One of the best things about this job is that I get to spend four to six hours a week in design meetings where I am CLEARLY the weakest link. That is NOT me getting Impostor Syndrome. There’s nothing subjective about it, it’s just a fact. I get to have meetings weekly with people who have made major impacts on the programming language community, who have their own wikipedia pages, who have advanced degrees, who have been at this for their entire professional lives and are at the top of their game.
Being the dumb guy in the room means that I have an opportunity to learn from the greats, and I cherish that opportunity.
Now, I do not believe for a moment that you are the weakest link in the writing room or on stage. I am quite sure that you hold your own, that your feelings of being a fraud are subjective, and are not shared by your colleagues. (Many of whom probably feel like you’re the genius and they’re the fraud some days.)
But suppose just for the sake of argument that you are the weakest playwrite in the room. That’s awesome! In that scenario, you get to be surrounded by people who are better than you, which means you get to learn.
I enjoy being the worst in the room at something. I love being surrounded by smarter people, better sailors, more talented pianists, whatever. They’re such interesting people and it’s a privilege to be among them.
Don’t get me wrong; I *love* to surround myself with brilliant people! I, too, prefer being the one in the room with the most to learn.
It’s the fear that all those wonderful people sort of wish you weren’t there that gets to me.
I have snapped out of the funk, however, and life is good again. Forward motion fixes all. Come see the show! It opens April 24! It’s good!