Addicted to Not Doing the Work

Thursday, October 29th, 2009 | 4 Comments »

A few years ago, I found myself with all kinds of angst about my career trajectory.  I was fully employed at a good job, doing creative projects on the side, but always stressed out about “what I was doing with my life.”  Maybe you have that problem, too.  I call it “your 20s.”

What helps me now?  A saying.

Do the work.  Do the work.

It’s a mantra I picked up while doing an interview for Script Magazine (“Big Names Change the Online Game”).  I was talking to Justine Bateman, Jill Kushner, and Wizards of Waverly Place EP Peter Murrieta, and during the interview, Peter took a call from what must have been a stressed-out, unsure understudy of his.  Like an AA sponsor to an addict about to take a sip, he said, “I don’t care if you’re tired, do the work.  If you’re frustrated, do the work.  If you’re sick, do the work.  No matter what, just do the work.”

It was probably the most poignant thing I personally received from the interview, and it happened in the background while trying to listen and take notes from Justine and Jill.

There’s some calming wisdom in those words.  That inborn talent matters little in the face of time.

When it comes to “honing your craft” or “getting good-er” or “putting in your “10,000 hours,” it’s all about getting better, step by step, at something that is really hard (like screenwriting, photography, lawyering, painting, negotiating, or anything that takes artistry).

Unfortunately, the AA analogy holds up.  We’re all a little addicted to ‘Not Doing the Work.’

It’s just too easy to get distracted.  To go to bed early.  To have “weekends.”

However, the people that succeed in anything worthwhile find a way to overcome that addiction and do a little bit of work every day.  Find that nanometer of improvement.  Over time, it adds up.

As for me, I’m not too worried any longer.  I’m on a journey to improvement, and I don’t expect the fast results I did a few years back.  I can’t stress about it.  I’m too busy doing the work.

Further reading on this subject: Ignore Everybody: and 39 Other Keys to Creativity by Hugh MacLeod, The Dip: A Little Book That Teaches You When to Quit (and When to Stick) by Seth Godin, Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell (“10,000 hours”), and Stephen King’s On Writing (“Get a closet and write there everyday.”).

[This is will be part of a series of posts under the Pursuing Creativity banner.]

4 Comments

  1. JoAnn McNayr says:

    Alec,
    It is just amazing to me the maturity and the depth of your perceptions about life. Sometimes, when you surprise me with your insights, I realize that on some level I don’t know you at all. But, it makes me realize what an interesting and complex person you are and I do want to know you better – as a friend – not just as your mother.
    Keep on – keeping on – doing the work.

  2. Ashley Dodson says:

    LOVE this!! Although this quote (“I don’t care if you’re tired, do the work. If you’re frustrated, do the work. If you’re sick, do the work. No matter what, just do the work.”) probably was directed to a poor assistant who works 14 hour days for crap money, I loved it anyway!

  3. Peter Murrieta says:

    Nope, not an assistant. A writer friend who was struggling to meet a deadline…..

    I had totally forgotten about this until someone sent me to the link……

    Peter Murrieta

  4. Alec McNayr says:

    Thanks for the comment, Peter — funny how little moments like this can be a learning experience for others. It certainly was for me.

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