Dear Katy,
Can I call you Katy? Seems kinda strange to call you Ms. Perry, especially since I’m old enough to be your dad…well, your uncle anyway.
Anyway, Katy, I took my older daughter Katie to see your movie Part Of Me yesterday. To be honest, despite secretly enjoying your music (please don’t tell anybody), I wasn’t particularly excited about seeing your movie. I mean, come on, a 42-year-old man seeing Part Of Me? Felt a little creepy to me, except for the fact that I was accompanying my daughter.
All that being said, I was pleasantly surprised – by the movie, by you, by the people you choose to surround yourself with – and thoroughly enjoyed myself. The honesty with which you expose yourself is both inspiring and heart breaking.
After the movie, as Katie and I walked across the Boston Commons, I asked her how she enjoyed it and what she thought of it. She was somewhat lost in thought, but managed to get an “I liked it” out. I couldn’t help but think I was getting a preview of my soon to be teenager – a topic for another day I suppose.
Over the last year or so I’ve caught Katie writing lyrics. Very often, when she would see that I had seen, she would crumple up the paper she was writing on. Recently she has begun fiddling on the piano with some of these lyrics in front of her.
She is still extremely private about what she is writing and stops as soon as she even senses me near the room.
I asked her if now that we had seen your movie, would she be pulling out her guitar that she rarely played and learn how to play a few chords. She said, “I’m really not any good at the guitar.” To which I responded that one only gets good at something by practicing and hard work. I brought her back to your movie, pointing out that your “instant” success was a bit of an illusion and that you had to work very hard for a long time for it, but also that a huge part of your success was your faith and belief in yourself and your music.
I don’t know what your ultimate message was with Part Of Me or even if you had one, but to me one of those messages was about following your dream with the understanding that hard work was necessary to ultimately reach one’s goal.
So that is what I tried to convey to Katie – if music was something she really wanted to do, and if writing songs was something she really enjoyed, then she needed to do it. I told her that without a doubt, she would write a bunch of stinkers, but that process would make her better and eventually lead to some real quality music.
I don’t know how much of that sunk in, but I am hoping that she will follow your example and chase whatever dreams she may have; if not in music then in whatever realm her dreams may lay.
So why am I mad at you? Why am I do angry with you?
When I was a boy, I wanted to grow up to be a singer. I “knew” I was destined to be on stage, singing my songs to thousands of people who were singing along with me. In my head I would make up songs and sing my heart out. I learned to play the flute (my pop said our apartment was too small for my first choices – trumpet or drums), then the piano and eventually began to teach myself the guitar.
And then I began to sing.
I knew I was on my way…until someone told me I sounded terrible and could not sing.
I. Was. Crushed.
And I stopped singing. I threw away the lyrics and let the music fade away from memory.
***
As a young man I decided I wanted to be a television star – not prime time mind you, I’m talking Soap Operas. Goofy, I know. If I couldn’t sing, I was sure I could still act – performing is performing, and I loved (love?) it. At the end of my time in college, I felt like I was just getting over my anxiety about “sounding terrible” and I was determined to go to New York.
Once again, the dream was in my head…
…and once again I let someone else tell me it was a bad idea.
And I didn’t go.
***
As an adult I went through a few different kinds of jobs – I managed paralegals, I taught high school, I did event planning for a premier New York City firm. All of them provided a certain amount of satisfaction, but I still wanted something different. Believing I could not sing or act, I eventually found a new love – fitness (part of the reason you find me here on Run Luau Run). I decided that maybe finally, I had found something that I could excel at, even possibly become a star of sorts (granted at a much smaller scale). I started to study to become a trainer, to help other help themselves. I really was gonna chase the dream this time.
Yet again, I let someone convince that this was not a good idea and I let it go.
***
Why am I mad at you? Because you and your movie and your music were not there when I was a boy, a young man and a late 30-something.
But I am glad I found you now as a dad because you have re-affirmed something in me.
I may be that plastic bag floating in the wind; I may be that paper thin house of cards; I may be buried six-feet underground; this firework may now simply only have the potential to be a sidewalk sparkler…that may be me; I know I am living a life of what if’s, of if only’s, of chances not taken, but I will be damned if I let my Katie do the same.
You reminded me yesterday to encourage my girl to take risks, not fear failure and chase her dreams now and not let anyone else dictate what it is that she wants to do, wants to be. I hope a part of Katy finds its way into a part of Katie.
Thank you for your music (it’s great to listen to while marathon training by the way), thank you for your movie, thank you for you…I’m still mad at you though!
WOW, I really like that. I think you are right too many people let others talk them out of their dreams…Dream big Katie…you can do anything you want…
It’s never too late to chase your dreams……
I am like you. It wasn’t so much that someone told me I could not do something, but that I didn’t have any support, or more accurately, anyone to encourage me. The most encouragement I ever got from my parents was that one of them told me to “do something with my art” and was the one thing I wanted to do for love and not for money…. Back then I only saw college as a way to a career, but never saw any career choices for girls (this was the 70’s) other than Nurse or Secretary. Back then if you didn’t have that really aggressive attitude, you went nowhere and I went nowhere. I look back and think what a waste. Now, I don’t believe I can handle college. I see DH struggling with everything about it, the culture and professors who are curt and not really available and the whole prospect scares me. I tell myself that I’m doing something important right now, focusing on being a mom to a boy who has a good chance at becoming independent in a cold, cold world… For now, this is who I am.
Love this.
You might like Kathryn Joosten’s story; never too late to follow a dream… Unless you want to be an Olympic gymnast or sing in a boy’s falsetto choir. 🙂
http://www.marilynannecampbell.com/2012/06/its-never-too-late-to-follow-your-dream.html?m=1
“I know I am living a life of what if’s, of if only’s, of chances not taken”,
I take issue with that, Luau. It’s never to late to reinvent yourself. I think David and I are good examples of that. You have so much of your life ahead of you and you can do it all.
Love you,
Mom
Luau, really liked this post. One of my favorite lines from a movie, in the closing scene, is of a girl telling the guy “Nobody thinks it’s going to work.” And the guy tells her: “You just described every great success story.”
Don’t underestimate the scale of what you are doing. I read your posts. I talk about them with my wife, my kids, my friends. Then they talk about it with their friends. And then one day you are out and about and you hear someone talking to someone else about something that inspired them… and you realize that their inspiration… was you. 🙂
@JSEdelman love(1000)
Oh, honey. If you want Katie to follow her dreams, show her how. Lead by example. The only day that it’s too late to change our lives is the day that they put us in the ground. Until then – game on.
Can you leave the family and fly off to live in LA? Well, no. But can you start working toward becoming a trainer? For heaven’s sake why not?
You’ve never been the sparkler on the sidewalk type, my dear. I will resist the temptation to say Baby, you’re a firework. (But you are.)
Do whatever you need to do to shine.
Luau, having played poker with you, I can say you are an excellent actor. I think you be awesome on a stage somewhere (the next one leaves in 5 min. – old joke)
-pokey
I commend you, Luau, for speaking your hearts truth. And I praise you for wanting to find the key to encourage your daughter to find the root of empowerment and do what her heart tells her fits for her. I agree with the others who have already posted, you can always do something about singing, playing and acting. There are countless people in our life time who took the chance to do something about those dreams and eventually found the power to take the steps to make it happen. Just the mere fact that you have such a great blog is evidence enough that in some ways you are completely capable of making “it” happen for you!!!
I’m proud that you spoke up about it. For some of us who are actually working musicians, entertainers, artists it’s beautiful to be reminded of how passionate these ideas are… it keeps me believing that I made the right choice.
Thank you. Om
The only person stopping you now, is you…..you can’t hide behind something anymore Luau, you just can’t. “Anything is possible”-Kevin Garnett.
George Elliot said it is never too late to be who you might have been (or something like that). Go for it, Luau, whatever “it” is. You will not regret it.