Donnie
Member
- Joined
- May 2019
- Messages
- 17
Today I made an incredibly difficult pyro decision... for the first time I have turned down one of my recurring gigs.
My heart hasn't been in this particular show the last couple years, and I could tell (even though they couldn't) that I was 'phoning it in.' It's not fair for anyone for me to dread working on a show, putting it off until the last minute.
The passion isn't there, and since I'm not in commerce, I really don't have anything to lose. I gain a little more sleep before the 4th, a little more time helping with the fundraising tent that the local 4-H shooting sports program is doing through Sizzboom, and will just flat-out have more 'free' time for a portion of my summer, right before 4-H fairs hit and we get super busy as a family.
If my pride would have allowed it, I would have offered to do a whole cake, manually-fired show, but since that audience has become used to me shooting a musical, I feel like that step backward would look 'worse' than me deciding to take a year off.
A few years ago, I was sooo eager to take on any little gig I could; now, not so much. Maybe it's burnout, maybe other hobbies, maybe family commitments, who knows... I still love fireworks, but I'm loving less and less the hours of music editing, scripting and prep that go into a musical.
Sorry for the ramble, just felt like sharing...
Thanks,
Donnie
My heart hasn't been in this particular show the last couple years, and I could tell (even though they couldn't) that I was 'phoning it in.' It's not fair for anyone for me to dread working on a show, putting it off until the last minute.
The passion isn't there, and since I'm not in commerce, I really don't have anything to lose. I gain a little more sleep before the 4th, a little more time helping with the fundraising tent that the local 4-H shooting sports program is doing through Sizzboom, and will just flat-out have more 'free' time for a portion of my summer, right before 4-H fairs hit and we get super busy as a family.
If my pride would have allowed it, I would have offered to do a whole cake, manually-fired show, but since that audience has become used to me shooting a musical, I feel like that step backward would look 'worse' than me deciding to take a year off.
A few years ago, I was sooo eager to take on any little gig I could; now, not so much. Maybe it's burnout, maybe other hobbies, maybe family commitments, who knows... I still love fireworks, but I'm loving less and less the hours of music editing, scripting and prep that go into a musical.
Sorry for the ramble, just felt like sharing...
Thanks,
Donnie