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.

Past feels like blurry watercolor, not like the history of real people
Now that his wife is gone for good, man is left with memories and love
The hole is always there, but I foolishly hope it’ll just go away
Could ‘free cities’ — existing inside more restrictive states — be a first step toward freedom?
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Love & Hope — Episode 12:
If I look closely at my old self, there’s a lot which is now dead
What if our best romantic decisions come by listening to ‘selfish genes’?
Drug warrior claims weed killed 37, but you and I can be just as blind