Sometimes, you just need to sit back and look at what you've become.
I'm a guy who lives in the future. Always considering the what if this, what if that. I do it so much that I don't participate in my life in the present. Then I woefully hope I do things to make the futures I dream of possible.
Kind of hard to do things when you're always planning for after they are done.
My girlfriend pointed this out to me yesterday, and I had to face something I had known was true.
Part of my desire to change direction in my education stems from a fear of not being good enough at what I'm studying (filmmaking/new media art). Instead of working to better myself, I've been trying to flee.
The time for fleeing is over.
As it happens, I place a dangerous amount of faith in my degree choosing my life path for me. I pick classes meticulously and obsessively, and stress over them to the point I change them all a billion times. It's a miracle I'm making such good progress towards my degree, as a matter of fact.
I've changed it a billion times already this summer since I registered, flinging myself down various life paths.
Now that I want to combat this planning with some actual doing however, I've reverted back to what I was advised for..
Filmmaking and art, here I come.-
Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Friday, May 18, 2012
Ambition
It is now, in the summer before my senior year of college, that I realize my sister was right.
I don’t have the ambition I need for anything I ever wanted to do.
That hurts.
I want to make excuses, but there aren’t any really.
All I ever wanted was to be a writer. To one day have my own name on a book I wrote, with people enjoying the stories I had to tell. The frustrating part: I want to write fantasy, and science fiction. I’m good at that. I started my writing in the sixth grade with a short tale about Eurotopia, a floating city destroyed in a dark invasion. That story became the origin story of the world I built afterwards, with culture and history and heroes. I finally finished a work in the 9th grade, my 40 page (notebook paper) story, Arabad, which was about the kidnapping of the hidden princess of Indria. I lost the notebook later, when a teacher who was going to type it for me never returned it.
Eventually high school and social life caught up with me, and my reading and writing were a thing of the past. I was able to mature my literary tastes through my high school English classes, but that was about it.
College came around, and i applied for English- Secondary Ed.
After a semester of hearing about how I would never get a job in English, and pressures from family, I freaked out and decided to change my major.
But I was having a hard time choosing a new one. Family was pushing computer science, I didn’t want to.
I eventually stumbled onto Media Arts while inquiring about a manga production class (Japan is a huge influence on my life since high school) and switched when I discovered I could also take a course in TV writing.
I signed up for the pre req Media Writing class, as well as a Creative Writing class in English the very next semester.
I had a blast in both, and between the two, my idea for a tv series, RIFT was born. I would take that story into Manga, and TV writing, and am still developing it.
But since then, I have also been plagued with thinking that writing is just too risky to get a job in, i should focus on art, filmmaking, design, something to have even a remote chance at a career. I started my grad school panic. I’ve been unable to find a film production program I think I would be happy with, and I’m pretty sure it’s cuz I don’t actually want to be a filmmaker. I’m looking into creative writing programs in dismay, because I don’t feel like I have a good enough English background now to get in.
If only I had finished stories when I was younger.
If only I had been able to discover the governor’s school for the humanities.
If only I had been confident enough to just do the Creative Writing concentration in English.
But,
if only is worthless to me now. Lamenting the fact that I didn’t do those things isn’t going to help me get where I want. It isn’t going to get a script sold or a novel published. Right now, all I need to be doing is writing. Writing, writing, writing. I need to get work done and get stuff out there to be workshopped. I have a chance to make up for the lack of ambition, to really go after the only dream I ever had. There is no more time to be scared. I have to stop with what if’s and if only’s and just try my damnedest to prove that writing skills I was always praised for, the ones I loved to use are still there and worth their salt. And if they aren’t worth, then I have to get them up to scratch.
I just can’t be scared and wait for someone to notice me. I have to jump out there and make myself seen.
Labels:
ambition,
choices,
college,
creative writing,
grad school,
lazy,
life,
majors,
mfa,
what if
Yo.
After enjoying blogging for a class I took this past
semester, I’m trying again to maintain a blog. What’s this one gonna be
about? My journey to figure out what I want to do with my life and what I
try along the way.
I’m about to be a senior at USC (in South Carolina) and time to apply to grad school is coming. Picking out a program for advanced study is proving more difficult than I thought it would be though.
To put it all in perspective, here’s a little background about me.
I started sifting through MFA programs, one after the other, but just couldn’t find a program that really felt like something I wanted to spend money or time on. I decided to look at writing programs for giggles.
I found so many that I had a good vibe from. The catch? They were programs in English departments, for Creative Writing and not just Screenwriting.
So now I’m debating catching up on English courses (the major I quit) and working my butt off to have fiction samples to send off with grad school apps.
Kinda crazy to think life is bringing me full circle.
I’m about to be a senior at USC (in South Carolina) and time to apply to grad school is coming. Picking out a program for advanced study is proving more difficult than I thought it would be though.
To put it all in perspective, here’s a little background about me.
- 21, from a rural southern town, with parents of neglectful dispositions
- lover of science fiction, and fiction in general, as well as Japanese culture and language
- currently studying Media Arts, but started as an English major
- overcome with looking for a more glamorous job than the one I always wanted: writer
I started sifting through MFA programs, one after the other, but just couldn’t find a program that really felt like something I wanted to spend money or time on. I decided to look at writing programs for giggles.
I found so many that I had a good vibe from. The catch? They were programs in English departments, for Creative Writing and not just Screenwriting.
So now I’m debating catching up on English courses (the major I quit) and working my butt off to have fiction samples to send off with grad school apps.
Kinda crazy to think life is bringing me full circle.
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