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.

Coming soon: Meet John Crispin, Demopublican for U.S. president
Time and maturity should change what we believe we need in mates
After first six podcast episodes, I’m encouraged but still a rookie
Is ‘galvanic skin response’ a way to measure how much kids learn?
We love great tales of salvation, but real change rarely happens
My bad teen poetry suggests I’ve always hungered for missing love
Life has a brutal habit of forcing us to confront our own hypocrisy