I talked with him yesterday. It went well.
We discussed a lot over two hours and he was both supportive but not understanding entirely.
It was mostly what I expected.
He had good arguments against my decision. Things like losing a solid paycheck and walking away from something I helped build.
He also didn't feel I would enjoy working on sets or being a teacher. I chalk that up to his personal opinion on how he feels about those things and not being me.
What's being missed is that what I'm desiring to go back to is what I always wanted to do and gave up so I could make a solid paycheck. He argues that it's not a decision you make at 30 when it's time to grow up, but I think it's exactly the decision you make at 30 (especially when you're single with no kids) to go after what you want rather than simply accept life as it is.
Yes, 30 is far different from doing it at say 23, but I also got a late jump on this having not gone to film school and started on sets until I was 25. So I'm late anyway. If I had started this at 18, going to school for film, then I would be in a different position right now. I made the decision to start this process even at 25, knowing that I had a late jump.
Anyway, while he doesn't understand my desire and feels I'm making a mistake (partly because he wants to keep me, the other part because he feels I'm not that type of person - which is another discussion that I rather not get into right now), he is willing to make it work.
I'm opening up to the idea of staying on in some way without being here full-time. I told him I'd be interested in working at events, but have no interest in the other work. How exactly we will work that out still needs to be discussed and we both agreed to continue talking about it.
It's heading in a positive direction. He actually made a good point to me which I appreciated. He told me that I need to stop thinking about how he'll handle the transition and simply just be selfish and ask for what I want.
While I think he mostly sees that being me asking for either more money or an assistant, I think I can be selfish and still compromise in some way to make it work for all of us. I know I want the freedom to work on commercials, film, television whenever the opportunity arrises and still be available to him for on-site events.
The other work I do here is "monkey-work" (which he actually said to me, so he gets why I don't want to do it anymore). So, perhaps I'll work with him on actively finding a replacement to handle those tasks. I'll stay on in an advisory role to that replacement and just slowly walk away from those duties rather than making a hard stance to leave December 1st.
I think that seems fair. I'm rambling a bit, but it helps to put my thoughts in writing.
Comment