Motivation should come from within. That’s what everybody says. You can read it in self-help books and on motivational posters. It’s what every well-meaning friend tells you.
Needing motivation from someone else is a crutch.
Ideas have always been easy for me, but being able to execute on those ideas has been trickier. I start projects and I can even know that a piece of work would be good if I finished it, but I lack the motivation to finish.
I end up staring at a blank page that never turns into a script. I look over old notes from a book project that never made it. I look at ideas I love — projects stillborn yet still full of possible life — and I feel powerless to breathe life into them. I crave a flesh-and-blood motivation — admiration, love, approval, passion — to inspire me to make my art.
I long for a crutch to help me walk.
For many years, I had wanted to make a film. I had ideas and I talked about making a first short film for a long time. But for years it was only talk — until something changed.

Noise of culture isn’t evil, but it drowns out what really matters
Industrial age relic: Do companies pay for your time or your brain?
Something in us usually wants to believe next year will be different
Attention word nerds: March forth, to celebrate National Grammar Day
Why do we often attract the folks who are most destructive for us?
A year later, late-night phone call and suicide threat still echo in me
UPDATE: Judge drops charges against Diane Tran; $100,000 raised
I want the culture to value smart women more than ‘hot’ women