Well....
So......
Like.....
Yah.....
I'm  glad we got that out of the way.  Now onto updates.
I am off the  Street and  currently back in Minneapolis with el  hubbo.  Both of us are in the developmental stages of our  respective careers.  The stage where people keep asking "And...you  are.....?"  when you know exactly who they  are because you've seen/auditioned for/talked/worked with them  several times already.  My current career goal is to not have this  happen more than once a month.  It's a good step.
My  most recent and interesting job is probably working for the Barbara Schneider  Foundation.  I'm hired as an actor to act (woah!) in scenarios that  help train employees who work with the mentally  ill.  This means nurses, security guards, prison guards, and even  administrators who might come into contact with volatile individuals are  trained in how to deescalate people without having to use force  or restraints, but instead use empathy  and listening.  I get to be the person they're deescalating (along with  several other actors who are in different rooms.  Each of us have a  different story/scenario.)  We do these enactments about 10 times so  everyone gets a chance to see or do each one.  It is not easy.  I have  to jump from a depressed cutter to a violent, angry, suicidal/homicidal  to a bi-polar teen with delusions.  I enjoy the work, and I've learned a  ton, but at the end of my  first day I was exhausted.
It's not like a play where you have a  gradual build in the tension before it finally explodes.  You basically  start at 100% intensity and go to 150%, and do it for four hours.  And  you have to be really mean to nice people who are scared of you.  And  while I love being able to do something so far from myself, I'm not  strictly performing-I'm interacting, and there's a part of me that feels  so sorry for some of these sweet, shy people I'm freaking out.  The  other thing that's hard is actually being told to do things you're not  "supposed" to do.  Like swear, kick things, scream, and mock peoples'  race/weight/religion/age/sex, etc.  But people with mental health  problems or personality disorders either don't know or don't care about a  lot of that, so part of this is to train people to deal with the shock  that comes with someone throwing all kinds of profanities and insults at  you without getting angry yourself.
Now I was about to write  "my job is sometimes to be horrible to people," but it's not.  I think  it's much more than that.  My job is to teach people how to develop  empathy with those who are not easy to communicate with or be around.   And if they do show me that  they care, part of my job is to "reward" them by calming down, or  opening up a little, or letting them come a little closer physically or  actually listening to something they say.  It's not easy-especially the  mean and vulgar part of it-but I think it's worth it if I can help  people learn important skills and principals for when they deal with  actual, real people like the ones I'm portraying.
On a lighter  note, le  hubie et moi will get to work on the same film next week.  It's a  low-budget feature being shot in MN called "Statue  of David."  I have 3 lines!  YEAH!  I'm playing a trophy-wife!   YEA-WHA?  Yah, I was pretty surprised that they'd have me, a quirky  best-friend type, in that role, but I'm not complaining.  I guess having  boobs is finally useful after all.  I didn't just write that.
Well....I'm  tired of writing now, so this post is done.
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7 comments:
That sounds very interesting. When I interviewed for my current social work job, I had to interview a teenager who used to be a client. It was a great way to see how to respond and react.
Yay! The return of Happy Laughter!
Wow. That job sounds IN-TENTS! (intentional misspelling for comic effect) I'm feeling guilty about having to make an unsuspecting stranger feel slightly uncomfortable tomorrow for an April Fool's joke - you're full-on FREAKING PEOPLE OUT! Impressive.
Thanks for posting, Laurel. It's good to hear from you again.
They can also be used to incubate premature babies. Of course nowadays they just use a machine;)
I like your job :D I bet you can do it extra well when you're having a bad day! haha
I don't think you should feel bad about the people you're "freaking-out". You're actually helping them... Do they know you're an actress and not a real loony?
awww... but sometimes it's fun to use the Force on kids... it doesn't actually work but it makes them stop crying cause they're laughing.
Wow- the mental health performances sound grueling. And remind me of the Seinfeld episode where Kramer has jaundice but is wishing for "a meatier role". Keep up the good work lady!
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