I was very confident, but I was also nervous. It was hard to say which feeling was stronger.
I was sitting in an auditorium on a late Saturday morning about 16 years ago. The auditorium was full. Maybe 600 people? 800? I don’t recall. We were waiting for a block of short films to start showing at the Sidewalk Moving Picture Festival in Birmingham. Most people were there to watch films. I was there to finally find out whether an audience liked my own first film.
My companion that morning was a girlfriend with whom I had a complicated relationship. Things didn’t end well for us, but I’ll always be grateful for her support that day.
I was nervous by the time the lights dimmed for the first short to start. My film was about the fourth in line, so I sat through several others first. I had never been to a film festival before, so I had just assumed the films would be good. I couldn’t tell anybody — because it would have sounded prideful — but I thought the other films were mostly terrible.
My film finally started. I held my breath. Would they laugh? We got to the first punchline. The audience roared with laughter. I was so happy that I wanted to cry.

Pretty much everyone shrugs at my most life-changing discovery
Meet Charlotte, one of the important women in my life
Biases teach us what to expect, but we often turn out to be wrong
Playing it safe isn’t good enough; I have to do things that might fail
Nothing new here: Russell Brand pushing same old socialist idiocy
Life is a game of hide-and-seek; we’re lost if we no longer seek
Third parties aren’t any better than two parties if they anoint rulers
Living a sane and healthy life is now radical by world’s standards
My need to rescue my child self fuels my urge to rescue animals