The Aligned Actor

Amy Schloerb

A podcast on mindfulness and mindset for performers. thealignedactor.substack.com

  1. 5d ago

    Is Acting Good For You?

    Welcome to The Aligned Actor Podcast! I’m Amy Schloerb, your friendly fellow actor and mindfulness and mindset coach helping us all thrive in our full actor lives. This is the podcast were I offer practical mindfulness tools and mindset shifts to help you handle the roller coaster ride of being an actor, all the ups, downs, twist, turns, and sometimes full on loop-de-loops so that you can actually enjoy your craft and career. I participated in Self Tape May this year and learned a ton about myself as an actor and self taping in general. I’m sharing those learnings with you today. Lesson 1 - Acting Is Good For Me! I had long suspected that acting was a form of self care for me, but now I have the data to confirm it. My Oura ring tracks my stress levels throughout the day and without fail, my body entered the “Relaxed” and/or “Restored” zones while I was doing my Self Tape May practice. What this tells me is that even if pretty much everything that surrounds being an actor is stressful — wondering when my next audition will be, hope my last gig was not actually my LAST gig, sending self tapes into the void — the actual craft of acting is relaxing and restorative for me. My body feels good doing it. That just makes me want to continue my self tape practice beyond May, and so do the rest of the lessons I’ve learned, so let’s continue… Lesson 2 - A Great Reader is a Gift Plenty of folks out there talk about how to optimize your self tape setup with lights and backdrops and camera angles. But truly, the reason my self tape practice became easy, fun, and resulted it scenes that I’m proud of, is because of my amazing reader. We’ve been actor buddies for years and during the pandemic we just started meeting up weekly on Zoom to chat about life, our careers, and play around with fun scenes. We’re so comfortable with each other and connect easily in scenes, which makes self taping feel like “Actor Play Time” instead of “Actor Stressing Try To Get a Job Time.” So if you don’t have a reader who LOVES reading with you, find that person and it will change EVERYTHING about how you feel about self tapes. Auditions will stop feeling like a means to an end and finally feel like just another opportunity to do what you love! Additionally, being able to connect with another actor and enjoy playing in the craft together is so important for us as artists. There’s so much about being an actor that is very isolating, and so finding times to be in community with each other and collaborate with each other is EVERYTHING. Lesson 3 - Self Taping is a Skill Worth Practicing The only way to feel comfortable with the process of self taping is to practice. * Practice setting up your equipment so it isn’t a 90-minute slog of adjusting angles and lights and backdrops. * Practice working with your amazing reader so that connecting with them — really listening and reacting to what they are giving you — is second nature. * Practice noticing, acknowledging, and breathing with your nerves so that you train your body and mind not to fight against the audition butterflies, but to work with them confidently. * Practice self taping SO MUCH that your self tape space starts to feel like a second home, a place where you feel free to express your character fully and expect to have fun presenting your amazing work. * Practice moving on after submitting (because there’s always another fun character to play with!) so that it’s easier to move on after real auditions. Basically, I want to be practicing self tapes so often that I start to forget whether I’m doing a tape for a real audition or just for fun. I recently heard the origin story of Self Tape May. Audrey Moore, actress and host of The Audrey Helps Actors Podcast, started working audition sides every single evening and then doing two takes the next morning. It worked so well for her that she decided to share the practice with her fellow actors and make it a contest during May, which is traditionally a slower time of the year for auditions. What I absolutely love and admire about Audrey’s daily self tape routine is that she essentially started practicing acting the same way a musician practices music. Now, I realize there are some differences between actors and musicians — we often need at least one other person in order to practice scenes — but go back to Lesson 2 of this article and remember that finding an actor buddy to practice acting with will be one of the best things you do for your career. And remember Lesson 1 (acting is self care) and suddenly, regularly practicing something that WILL impact my ability to book work is also a way to connect with a fellow actor, and not feel so alone on this journey, AND a way to care for my creative soul? SIGN ME UP! 🙋🏼‍♀️ Self taping doesn’t have to be something that we dread. It can be something that we love. Those are my lessons from Self Tape May. Thank you so much for taking the time to read my reflections. I hope you found them helpful and inspiring. And if you did find this content helpful and inspiring, I’d be honored if you’d leave a comment, share it with your actor pals, and check out my offerings below. Thanks! Get Out of Your Head and Rock Your Next Audition 🎧 I’ve created a free guided meditation to help you get out of your head and into your character so that you can rock your next audition. It’s going to help you calm your nerves, let go of distracting thoughts — How can I book this? What do they want? — and focus in on what your character wants, what’s going on in the scene, so that you can present your best work every time. Access Your Presence and Feel Empowered in Your Actor Life 📖 The Aligned Actor Mindfulness Toolkit This ebook is comprehensive collection of tools guaranteed to be the Dramamine you need for the roller coaster ride of #ActorLife. Whether you’re dealing with audition nerves, obsessively checking your email after submitting a self tape, or just learned your series has been canceled, there’s something here that will help you access your presence and feel grounded again. I’m a professional actor, a mindfulness and mindset coach, and I’m ready to help you thrive in your actor life. 🎭 I’ve been a professional actress for almost 20 years. I’ve survived 3 industry shut downs - 2 strikes and 1 global pandemic. I’ve worked in TV, film, commercials, and produced my own award-winning web series. 🧠 I’ve been a life coach for 5 years, specializing in mindfulness and neurolinguistic programming and helping people become more aware and focused on making positive changes in their lives. 💖 I blend lived experience with powerful, proven coaching tools. 🎢 Let’s get you feeling resilient, empowered, focused, playful, relaxed, confident, and riding the acting career roller coaster without throwing up! 🤗 Get full access to The Aligned Actor at thealignedactor.substack.com/subscribe

    17 min
  2. May 21

    Your Nerves Are Not Your Enemy

    Raise your hand if you wish you could wave a magic wand and never feel nervous for an audition or a performance again. Well, you’re in luck because today on The Aligned Actor Podcast we’re talking about nerves — stage fright, audition nerves, performance anxiety — and I’m going to help you reframe your mindset around nerves and offer you a few simple techniques to calm your body and mind quickly. I’m Amy Schloerb, your friendly fellow actor and mindfulness and mindset coach for actors, helping us all thrive in our full actor lives. This is the podcast were I offer practical tools and mindset shifts to help you handle the roller coaster ride of being an actor, all the ups, downs, twist, turns, and sometimes full on loop-de-loops so that you can actually enjoy your craft and career. Nerves are something that every actor faces throughout their career. They show up any time we are putting our work out into the world, whether that’s for an audition or showing up on set or stage. I don’t know any human who enjoys feeling nervous, and feeling nervous when doing something that you love, such as acting, feels especially unpleasant and sometimes confusing. If we love acting so much, why would we feel nervous doing it? I think many of us, myself included for a long time, believe that our nerves are somehow a sign of weakness or an indication that we’re not good enough. If we could only get rid of our nerves once and for all, we’d finally be “legit” actors, worthy of our dream careers. It makes sense that we feel this desire to “conquer” our nerves so that we never have to feel nervous while acting again. But I hear so many A-List actors — the folks who have “dream careers” — saying that they still get nervous. Meryl Streep said she was nervous her first day on Only Murders in the Building and Perdo Pascal holds his hand on his belly while walking the red carpet because that’s where his nerves show up in his body. So I want you to know… * Nerves are not a sign that you are untalented. * Nerves are not a sign that you don’t know what you’re doing. * Nerves are a sign that you care. I don’t want you to fight them or push them away. Because when you resist your nerves, you just feed them more power. They grow and grow until they take over your entire experience. As the saying goes, what we resist persists. Befriending Your Nerves Instead, I want to encourage you to befriend your nerves by mindfully noticing them just like we notice thoughts and sensations in mindfulness meditation. When we sit for a formal mindfulness session, we focus on our breath and notice our thoughts, body sensations, and sometimes our dog sighing in our lap. We don’t push away or attach to any of those stimuli. We just acknowledge them and allow them to come and go while we choose to stay focused on our breath. When we stop resisting our nerves and instead say, “Hi, I see you, nerves. Of course you’re here, I’m about to record a big audition and I care a lot about doing a good job” something magical happens. Having been acknowledged and accepted, our nerves tend to lose their intense grip on us. They become acknowledged as a part of us, and therefore no longer fully consume us. So “Step One” of dealing with your nerves is to stop fighting against them. Stop making them the enemy. Acknowledge and accept your nerves as a normal, human nervous system reaction that makes sense in this moment. Getting Present For The Scene Additionally, I have three simple mindfulness techniques that you can use to calm your body and mind thereby lessening the uncomfortable physical sensation of the nerves. These techniques will calm you down, and get you present in your body and mind, so you can focus on the scene. 1 - The long, slow exhale Mindful breathing is one of the fastest ways to calm the body and mind, and my favorite calming breath technique is the long, slow exhale. Your heart rate goes down during your exhale, so intentionally elongating your exhale is a great way to calm your body. How to do it: You can slow down your exhale by constricting the airflow coming out of your mouth. You can purse your lips, like when you blow across the top of a bottle to make that deep, low whistle sound. Alternatively, you can make your lips into an “O” shape, like when you are gently blowing bubbles with a bubble wand, or using a straw to blow bubbles in your chocolate milk! (was I the only one who did this as a kid?) As you inhale and slowly exhale, really tune into the body sensations of breathing. Notice the feeling of air coming into your body. Notice your belly and chest expanding. Notice the light positive pressure of air on your lips as you slowly release the breath through pursed lips. Also tune into the calming effects on your body and mind. Notice your shoulder tension release. Notice your body start to relax. Notice your mind calming as it focuses solely on the sensation of your breath. 2 - Hand Tracing This is a wonderfully soothing technique that combines light, gentle touch with slow breathing. You’re basically doing the same breath technique as described above, while also tracing from your wrist to the end of each finger and back again with each breath cycle. How to do it: Hold your hand palm up. Beginning at your wrist, lightly trace the index finger of your opposite hand up through the center of your palm and out to each finger. As you trace out to your finger tip, inhale. As you trace back down to your wrist, slowly exhale. 3 - “Feel your feet on the floor.” This one comes from my audition coach (the amazing John M. Keating — seriously, take his class and book him when you need audition coaching). When folks are feeling nervous or in their head before a scene, he simply says “feel your feet on the floor.” Seems deceptively simple, but all too often our nerves get us in our heads and completely out of our bodies. Feeling the contact between your feet and the floor is an instant way get back into your body. Each of these mindfulness-based techniques will help you bring your body and mind back to the present moment so you can be ready to act. Practicing Creates Muscle Memory Self Tape May is a great time to practice befriending and working with your nerves! You have ample opportunity (16 tapes!) to practice acknowledging and accepting your nerves, and employing mindfulness tools to calm yourself and get present for your scene. Additionally, practicing NOW and OFTEN will give your nervous system a kind of muscle memory that it will retain for every audition and performance moving forward. The first week that I did Self Tape May, I was nervous. I felt pressure to put out “good tapes” online. I did a six tapes my first day and it was great because it didn’t take too long before I relaxed into the fun zone of “actor playtime.” When my week two work session rolled around, I was feeling way more relaxed in my space because my body and nervous system remembered, “Oh, yeah! I’m showing up to act and I generally feel calm and present when I act. Let’s do this!” You can give your body and mind the muscle memory of infusing your self tape space with acting fun and joy and play, so that when a real audition rolls around, you will be ready to rock ‘n’ roll. Your body will feel automatically feel calmer for the practice that you gave it. Remember… Your nerves are not your enemy. They are a part of you that cares so much about you and your acting. They want to protect you. They are on your side. And you can ease their uncomfortable sensations by accepting them, not resisting them, and offering them some calming techniques that really work. You can find even more calming techniques in my book, which is linked up in the show notes or the Substack article. If you found this content helpful or inspiring I’d be honored if you’d leave a comment, share it with your actor pals, and find out more about me and my offerings below. Thanks! I’m a professional actor, a mindfulness and mindset coach, and I’m ready to help you thrive in your actor life. 🎭 I’ve been a professional actress for almost 20 years. I’ve survived 3 industry shut downs - 2 strikes and 1 global pandemic. I’ve worked in TV, film, commercials, and produced my own award-winning web series. 🧠 I’ve been a life coach for 5 years, specializing in mindfulness and neurolinguistic programming and helping people become more aware and focused on making positive changes in their lives. 💖 I blend lived experience with powerful, proven coaching tools. 🎢 Let’s get you feeling resilient, empowered, focused, playful, relaxed, confident, and riding the acting career roller coaster without throwing up! 🤗 Get Out of Your Head and Rock Your Next Audition 🎧 I’ve created a free guided meditation to help you get out of your head and into your character so that you can rock your next audition. It’s going to help you calm your nerves, let go of distracting thoughts — How can I book this? What do they want? — and focus in on what your character wants, what’s going on in the scene, so that you can present your best work every time. NEW: Check Out My Book to Help You Access Your Presence and Feel Empowered in Your Actor Life 📖 The Aligned Actor Mindfulness Ebook & Toolkit: Access Presence in Your Actor Life and Feel Empowered in Your Craft and Your Career This ebook is comprehensive collection of tools guaranteed to be the Dramamine you need for the roller coaster ride of #ActorLife. Whether you’re dealing with audition nerves, obsessively checking your email after submitting a self tape, or just learned your series has been canceled, there’s something here that will help you access your presence and feel grounded again. And it’s just $7. Get full access to The Aligned Actor at thealignedactor.substack.com/subscribe

    25 min
  3. May 14

    Your Inner Critic Is Abusing You. Let's Fix That.

    If you’ve ever hit submit on a self tape or left an in-person audition and immediately started tearing yourself to shreds, this is the episode for you. Hello and welcome back to The Aligned Actor Podcast. I’m Amy Schloerb your fellow actor, and mindfulness and mindset coach for actors, and this is the place where I share practical tools and mindset shifts to help you thrive in your craft and your career. I want you to feel resilient, empowered, focused, playful, relaxed, and confident in your full actor life. One of the ways we can do that is by actually doing something to change your relationship with your inner critic, who I bet is abusing you with their never ending monologue of harsh criticisms. Stuff like…. * If you were a better actor you’d be booking more. * Ugh. That moment was so fake. * I can tell you were in your head on that line! * Gawd, why are you so terrible in this tape?! * I bet casting will watch this and laugh…not in a good way! Sigh. Why do we do this to ourselves? Yes, it’s good to have high expectations, but does the voice in our head need to be sooooo self-critical, harsh, and downright abusive? No. It does not. But we’ve given it a lot of practice over the years and literally have created a whole saying that affirms it’s normalcy in our lives. I am my own worst critic. And yes, that statement does imply that no one else is judging our acting as harshly as we are, and that we’re “better than we give ourselves credit for,” but at what mental cost are we continuing to feed this beast? There’s an Indigenous parable about two wolves that battle inside each of us. One is good and one is evil. The one that wins is the one that you feed. Now, I’m not saying that our inner critic is all evil. It’s trying to protect us from the judgments of others by expecting a lot from us. It’s trying to keep us safe. But when its criticism is excessively negative and harsh, it doesn’t feel very safe and it can actually harm our overall actor mindset and impact the actions we take in our careers. It can cause us to feel unmotivated, get in our heads during auditions, and lead us to feeling burnt out in our careers. Fortunately, there’s another “wolf” that lives within us — our Inner Fan. This is the part of us that knows we’re an amazing, talented, highly book-able actor. Now, maybe the idea of an inner positive, supportive, “you’re so talented!” type of “voice” makes you feel uncomfortable. Amy, isn’t that just bragging? It’s actually not bragging at all because to quote Robin Williams in The Birdcage, “you keep it all inside.” That’s why it’s called your INNER fan, same as your INNER critic. Feeding Your Inner Fan Practicing your inner fan voice is all about intentionally acknowledging your talent instead of only seeing your flaws. Intentionally noticing and acknowledging when you do good work helps break the default habit of judging your work solely through the eyes of your inner critic. Maybe you’re used to finishing a scene and immediately pointing out everything you did wrong in it. “Eh, I was in and out on that one and I rushed that line at the end. And now, watching the tape back, I can totally tell I’m acting. This is all terrible. I’m terrible!” Those self-critical, wet blanket statements are your inner critic running a muck! Nothing is ever good enough for them. They will never be able to see your good work, even when it’s right in front of them. But your inner fan knows and recognizes your true actor talent. You can practice their voice out loud (or in your own mind) by intentionally acknowledging your skills as an actor when you feel them and see them. Evaluate your work through their eyes for a change. After you finish a scene, notice and acknowledge the moments in the scene that felt good to you. * I really felt connected in that moment. * That part in the middle felt awesome. * I really had fun with the character in that take. Watch your self-tapes. Notice and acknowledge the moments where you enjoy your work. * I like my reaction on that line. I can tell I was really listening there. * I was really going after my character’s want in that moment. * I’m proud of how committed I was at the end there. If your inner critic is especially good at their job, this new way of doing things may take a lot of getting used to. At first you may have to practice by saying, “Oh, my inner critic has a lot to say about that take, but let me ask my inner fan to point out at least one good moment.” It’s okay to start small and let this practice grow. Give It A Try! Self Tape May a great time to practice seeing your work with your inner fan’s eyes. Practice finding 3-5 moments you like in each tape. Ask yourself, “What does my inner fan think of that take?” When you train your inner fan to be louder and take control of the microphone of your mind more often, you will be amazed with how much better you feel in your actor life. I bet you feel more motivated, more optimistic, more creative, and enjoy your craft and your career so more than ever. That’s what I want for you. I want you to enjoy your full actor life and feel confident in your craft and your career. Your inner fan is the key. If you found this content helpful or inspiring, I’d be honored if you’d leave a comment and/or share it with your actor pals. Also, check out my free audition meditation and my mindfulness ebook below. I’m a professional actor, a mindfulness and mindset coach, and I’m ready to help you thrive in your actor life. 🎭 I’ve been a professional actress for almost 20 years. I’ve survived 3 industry shut downs - 2 strikes and 1 global pandemic. I’ve worked in TV, film, commercials, and produced my own award-winning web series. 🧠 I’ve been a life coach for 5 years, specializing in mindfulness and neurolinguistic programming and helping people become more aware and focused on making positive changes in their lives. 💖 I blend lived experience with powerful, proven coaching tools. 🎢 Let’s get you feeling resilient, empowered, focused, playful, relaxed, confident, and riding the acting career roller coaster without throwing up! 🤗 Get Out of Your Head and Rock Your Next Audition 🎧 I’ve created a free guided meditation to help you get out of your head and into your character so that you can rock your next audition. It’s going to help you calm your nerves, let go of distracting thoughts — How can I book this? What do they want? — and focus in on what your character wants, what’s going on in the scene, so that you can present your best work every time. NEW: Check Out My Book to Help You Access Your Presence and Feel Empowered in Your Actor Life 📖 The Aligned Actor Mindfulness Toolkit: Access Presence in Your Actor Life and Feel Empowered in Your Craft and Your Career This ebook is comprehensive collection of tools guaranteed to be the Dramamine you need for the roller coaster ride of #ActorLife. Whether you’re dealing with audition nerves, obsessively checking your email after submitting a self tape, or just learned your series has been canceled, there’s something here that will help you access your presence and feel grounded again. And it’s just $7. Get full access to The Aligned Actor at thealignedactor.substack.com/subscribe

    16 min
  4. May 7

    Are You Leaving Your Auditions Unfinished?

    Hello and welcome back to The Aligned Actor Podcast on Substack. I’m Amy Schloerb your friendly neighborhood actor and mindfulness and mindset coach for actors and creatives, offering practical ideas and inspirations to help you thrive in your full #ActorLife. All too often, auditions feel “unfinished” until we know the outcome - did we book or not? In reality, an audition is finished, complete, done and dusted as soon as we submit the self tape or get a “Great, thanks for coming in” from the session runner. It’s over. It’s done. It’s out of our hands. It’s out of our control. It’s time to move on. But that’s so hard because we’re in a liminal space of uncertainty. This audition might lead to something we really want — or it might not — and leaving it open ended like that is torture. It feels like getting to the end of a song, but never hearing the last resolving note or phrase. “O’er the land of the free…and the home…of the—” FINISH THE DAMN SONG! I BEG OF YOU!!!!! If you’re waiting for the “result” — callback, booking, etc — to feel complete with the audition, you are likely living in an uncomfortable state of uncertainty, that you do not need to occupy. You are also denying yourself a much deserved and satisfying hit of dopamine that comes from completing a task. Close The Loop So what do we do? How do we get out of audition liminal-limbo hell? Find a way to feel complete with the audition. Close the loop on your audition instead of leaving it open-ended by “waiting to hear.” Tell your brain it’s done so your brain can move on to other things. Of course, this is easier said than done, but that’s why we practice. Practice the energy of “that’s done” as soon as you’ve hit submit on your self tape or as you walk to your car after an in-person audition. * Mentally (or physically) cross that audition off your to do list. Put a big, ol’ check mark next to it. The satisfaction that we get from checking things off a list is thanks to the dopamine hit of completion. ✅ * Give yourself a little pat on the back and or say “Good job, me!” for the work that you just did. That little self-acknowledgement and celebration further activates dopamine in the brain and reinforces the idea that this audition is done. 💁🏼‍♀️ * Throw your hands up like the bakers on The Great British Bake Off when the hosts say, “Your time is up! Please step away from your bakes.” A physical action further reinforces the “it’s done” energy for your mind and body. 🙌🏻 EMBODYING * Use a post-audition affirmation and mindfully redirect your focus back to that phrase whenever it drifts into the limbo land of “I wonder if I’ll book that.” 🤔➡️🤗 * “I did my work.” * “My work is done.” * “That audition is finished.” * “I’m done with that audition.” * “Checking it off and moving on with my day!” * “Thank you! Next!” * Practice knowing that each tape you submit and every audition you go on strengthens your reputation in the entertainment industry. You never know who will see your tape and what it will lead to. Thinking that “booking THIS job” is the only amazing outcome this audition could be leading to is a lack of imagination. 📈 * Many years ago, I built up a relationship with a commercial casting director who would call me in all the time. For whatever reason I never booked any of the commercials they were casting, but one day, seemingly out-of-the-blue I got a straight offer from them for a web series they were casting. They had liked my work over the years and knew that I would be great in this part. An audition is just some completed acting work that shows off your talent and builds your reputation as a reliable actor. It’s done and complete just as it is. It’s completion and the fact that you share it with the industry is the ultimate audition success. Practice ‘Closing The Loop’ During Self Tape May You can practice this idea during Self Tape May. Don’t wait for likes and comments or to be reposted on The Audrey Helps Actors story feed to feel successful and “complete” with that tape. The fact that you posted the tape is the success. Move on to the next. Heck, even just doing the tape for yourself and reviewing it like game footage without sharing it with anyone else, is the success. Move on to the next. There are so many tapes to do in Self Tape May — 16 if you want to be eligible for the prizes — that it’s the perfect opportunity to practice “That’s done” energy and make it a habit. You did the work, you turned it in, and now it’s time to say “Woohoo! Yay me!” and move on. Don’t live in limbo with your auditions. Practice the energy of DONE. Your mind will me clearer and calmer for it. If you found this content helpful or inspiring, I’d be honored if you’d leave a comment and/or share it with your actor pals. I’m a professional actor, a mindfulness and mindset coach, and I’m ready to help you thrive in your actor life. 🎭 I’ve been a professional actress for almost 20 years. I’ve survived 3 industry shut downs - 2 strikes and 1 global pandemic. I’ve worked in TV, film, commercials, and produced my own award-winning web series. 🧠 I’ve been a life coach for 5 years, specializing in mindfulness and neurolinguistic programming and helping people become more aware and focused on making positive changes in their lives. 💖 I blend lived experience with powerful, proven coaching tools. 🎢 Let’s get you feeling resilient, empowered, focused, playful, relaxed, confident, and riding the acting career roller coaster without throwing up! 🤗 Get Out of Your Head and Rock Your Next Audition 🎧 I’ve created a free guided meditation to help you get out of your head and into your character so that you can rock your next audition. It’s going to help you calm your nerves, let go of distracting thoughts — How can I book this? What do they want? — and focus in on what your character wants, what’s going on in the scene, so that you can present your best work every time. NEW: Check Out My Book to Help You Access Your Presence and Feel Empowered in Your Actor Life 📖 The Aligned Actor Mindfulness Ebook & Toolkit: Access Presence in Your Actor Life and Feel Empowered in Your Craft and Your Career This ebook is comprehensive collection of tools guaranteed to be the Dramamine you need for the roller coaster ride of #ActorLife. Whether you’re dealing with audition nerves, obsessively checking your email after submitting a self tape, or just learned your series has been canceled, there’s something here that will help you access your presence and feel grounded again. And it’s just $7. Get full access to The Aligned Actor at thealignedactor.substack.com/subscribe

    12 min
  5. Apr 23

    Of Course You Want To Book It!

    Hello and welcome back to The Aligned Actor Substack. I’m Amy Schloerb your friendly neighborhood actor and mindfulness and mindset coach for actors, offering practical ideas and inspirations to help you thrive in your full #ActorLife. Let’s Break Some Rules! I want you to break a BIG “good little actor” rule in your next audition. Want it. I mean REALLY WANT it. Let yourself feel how much you want to book this part. Ooooh! Feels a little scary and reckless, right? I know. Do it anyway. 😉 “But, Amy, I shouldn’t think about booking…” Your “good little actor” brain is telling you, “Don’t think about booking. Just have fun with it. Book the room. You can’t expect to book every job, so just do the audition and let it go.” But, let’s be real. There’s a part that lives inside every actor that whispers seductively… “If I’m a talented enough actor, I should book everything.” And so we WANT to book everything. That desire lives inside us no matter how much we try to deny it. So let’s try something completely against the rules. F—ING. WANT. IT. Let yourself feel that deep desire to book the role. Acknowledge and explore YOUR want…just like you do with your character’s want. When we resist and suppress our desire to book, we trap all that energy inside us, and it takes even more energy to resist those genuine feelings. When we fully acknowledge OUR want, we free up that desire energy AND all the energy we were subconsciously using to resist that want. When we acknowledge how cool it would be to book this part and play this character, we amp up our commitment to a whole new level. Take the role. Claim the role. Don’t subconsciously turn the role down before you’ve even auditioned by saying stuff like, “I probably wont get it.” Yeah, we all know “you can’t book every job.” Who cares? The line is tired and it hold us back. We can OWN every audition. Ownership comes from letting yourself want it — acknowledging your desire to play this character in this project working with these people. Acknowledging Your Want Sets You Free Once you acknowledge YOUR want, you are free to move on to focusing on your character’s want. Additionally, you can stay focused more cleanly on your character’s want because you will spot the difference between focusing on your want vs focusing on your character’s want. You will feel the difference in your body and notice the difference in your thoughts. You’re “in your head” thinking things like… * I want to remember my lines. * I want to get this scene right. * I want to book this job. All valid things to want as an actor. But when it’s game time, your focus needs to shift. You need to get out of YOUR head and into the character. * I want him to stay in the car. * I want to take this couple’s wedding cake order. * I want to give the FBI agents the information. Your character is never thinking, Am I getting this scene right? What’s my next line? Am I being “too big” in this moment? Your character is fully focused on their want. As an actor, that’s where your focus needs to be during your audition. The mindful way to do that is to acknowledge BOTH your desire to book and your character’s desire to get whatever they want, so that you can cleanly shift between the two and stay with your character’s want. Just like in mindfulness meditation where we practice focusing on our breath and then noticing when we’ve lost that focus and gently returning to that focus, so it can be with our auditions, too. I want to him to stay in the car — Oh, I’m thinking about getting this scene right — Okay, let’s keep him in the car. Simple. Gentle. Just keep practicing. Practice Acknowledging YOUR Want Next week we’re going to do a practice to help you acknowledge your want to book and keep your focus on your character’s want. For this week, I just want you to start embracing this idea of letting yourself want to be great in your auditions. * Let yourself want to book. * Let yourself want to present good work to casting. * Let yourself want to do a good job with the audition. You’re allowed to want whatever you want. So just practice acknowledging that you want to book. Quick Note: “I don’t want to get my hopes up.” Really quick, because we’re gonna do a full episode on it later, let’s just acknowledge the phrase that might be holding you back from fully embracing your want. “I don’t want to get my hopes up.” I hear you. Disappointment SUCKS. However, as soon as I hear someone say, “I don’t want to get my hopes up” I know that their hopes are already up. They WANT whatever they want and that phrase is a red flag of resisting that want — because no one wants to feel the disappointment of not getting what they want. It hurts. Again, we’re gonna get into this WAY more later, but I just wanted to acknowledge that phrase might be making the idea of letting yourself want to book feel really uncomfortable. And I want you to try it anyway. Just play with it. You got this. ❤️ If you found this content helpful or inspiring, I’d be honored if you’d leave a comment and/or share it with your actor pals. I’m a professional actor, a mindfulness and mindset coach, and I’m ready to help you thrive in your actor life. 🎭 I’ve been a professional actress for almost 20 years. I’ve survived 3 industry shut downs - 2 strikes and 1 global pandemic. I’ve worked in TV, film, commercials, and produced my own award-winning web series. 🧠 I’ve been a life coach for 5 years, specializing in mindfulness and neurolinguistic programming and helping people become more aware and focused on making positive changes in their lives. 💖 I blend lived experience with powerful, proven coaching tools. 🎢 Let’s get you feeling resilient, empowered, focused, playful, relaxed, confident, and riding the acting career roller coaster without throwing up! 🤗 Get Out of Your Head and Rock Your Next Audition 🎧 I’ve created a free guided meditation to help you get out of your head and into your character so that you can rock your next audition. It’s going to help you calm your nerves, let go of distracting thoughts — How can I book this? What do they want? — and focus in on what your character wants, what’s going on in the scene, so that you can present your best work every time. NEW: Check Out My Book to Help You Access Your Presence and Feel Empowered in Your Actor Life 📖 The Aligned Actor Mindfulness Ebook & Toolkit: Access Presence in Your Actor Life and Feel Empowered in Your Craft and Your Career This ebook is comprehensive collection of tools guaranteed to be the Dramamine you need for the roller coaster ride of #ActorLife. Whether you’re dealing with audition nerves, obsessively checking your email after submitting a self tape, or just learned your series has been canceled, there’s something here that will help you access your presence and feel grounded again. And it’s just $7. Get full access to The Aligned Actor at thealignedactor.substack.com/subscribe

    16 min
  6. Apr 16

    "You don't want it bad enough..."

    Hello and welcome back to The Aligned Actor Substack. I’m Amy Schloerb your friendly neighborhood actor and mindfulness and mindset coach for actors and creatives, offering practical ideas and inspirations to help you thrive in your full #ActorLife. I’m writing this article from bed because I am turning this publication into an OnlyFans. JK. 🤣 In actuality, I am a little under the weather at the moment and as I was resting — Okay fine I was making tweaks to my Substack, so not really resting — I got an idea for a post. Rest feels dangerous to actors. We’re literally scared to stop. Why? Because there is always SOMETHING we could be doing to further our careers. * Practicing our self tapes * Working out * Attending a casting director workshop * Attending a class * Switching out our headhsots * Picking looks for our next batch of headshots * Updating our reel * Cutting our reel into bitesized clips * Writing our own script * Filming a short with our friends * Self-submitting on Actors Access (and all the other sites) * Reaching out to other industry professionals * Researching and watching all the movies and shows …and so and so forth…forever and ever…and…EVER… And if we are not doing something to further our acting careers… Then we must not want it bad enough to deserve it. That’s the sneaky, secret thought that keeps us hustling and grinding and too scared to rest. But the whole notion of “wanting it bad enough” is ridiculous anyway. Allow me to demonstrate by replacing “acting career” with “cookie” — because who doesn’t want a cookie? How badly do you want a cookie? * Bad enough to walk to the cupboard? * Bad enough to drive to the store? * Bad enough to travel across your city, state, country, or the entire world? * Bad enough to go into space? * Bad enough to sacrifice all other food for the rest of your life? * Bad enough to never see your family again? * Bad enough to give up acting? (see what I did there?) Sure. Maybe you’d drive across town for a really good cookie, but the rest of these hypotheticals just end up sounding goofy. No one wants a cookie THAT badly. I’m not giving up my WHOLE HUMAN LIFE for a cookie. And yet, that’s what we start to expect of ourselves when it comes to our acting careers. That’s why we feel scare to rest. But we need to rest. Rest allows us to recharge and get ready for whatever is next. So we need to ditch the idea that anything less than 27/7/365 hustle and grind means we don’t want it bad enough. We want it and we’re doing it. FULL STOP. And we must rest and live our lives as we’re doing it. That’s why I talk about actor life, not just acting career. You’re an actor. You have a career AND you have a life. You have an actor FULL life. Don’t give that up for anything. So I’m going to go back to resting and recovering from whatever the heck this is and I will see you next time. If you found this article helpful or inspiring, I’d be honored if you’d leave a comment, share it with a pal, or give a one-time donation. I’m a professional actor, a mindfulness and mindset coach, and I’m ready to help you thrive in your actor life. 🎭 I’ve been a professional actress for almost 20 years. I’ve survived 3 industry shut downs - 2 strikes and 1 global pandemic. I’ve worked in TV, film, commercials, and produced my own award-winning web series. 🧠 I’ve been a life coach for 5 years, specializing in mindfulness and neurolinguistic programming and helping people become more aware and focused on making positive changes in their lives. 💖 I blend lived experience with powerful, proven coaching tools. 🎢 Let’s get you feeling resilient, empowered, focused, playful, relaxed, confident, and riding the acting career roller coaster without throwing up! 🤗 Get my FREE Pre-Audition Focusing Meditation 🎧 I’ve created a free meditation to help you get out of your head and into your character so that you can rock your next audition. It’s going to help you calm your nerves, let go of distracting thoughts — “How can I book this? What do they want?” — and focus in on what your character wants, what’s going on in the scene, so that you can present your best work every time. Get full access to The Aligned Actor at thealignedactor.substack.com/subscribe

    5 min
  7. Apr 9

    Who's Your Biggest Fan?

    *Note: If you watch the video, keep in mind that it is from 2023, the year that I thought using cute GIFs to illustrate my points was the most brilliant idea ever for going viral on YouTube. Oh, Amy…. I think we’re all grateful that I’ve moved on from that phase. 🤣 We’re on the messy side of my office today because the sun is being weird on that side where my backdrop is pretty, but we’re just gonna go with it cause this is not about perfection, right? So I’ve been on a bit of a healing journey recently specifically around my mom, thinking a lot about her and about how she was my biggest fan, and I really miss that. For those of you who don’t know, my mom died when I was 24. She was my biggest fan. It was so wonderful and beautiful, how much she believed in me and thought I was talented. I remember this one improv show that I did. She had this joke where she always had this fantasy of standing up in the middle of the audience when I was performing on stage and yelling out, “That’s my baby!” She got to do it that night, and I actually like teed her up for it. I said, “This was always my mom’s dream to...” and then she took it from there. Everybody loved it. It was very fun. The show then ended up being really great, which is always a bonus. Somebody took her home I came home later. She had kind of waited up in her bed to be like, “Amy, Amy, I have to talk to you about the show. It was so good. Oh my goodness. It was amazing. You were so good and everybody in the show was so good. And it was just amazing! It was wonderful!” She went on and on and on and on and on and on about how great it was. Here I had been thinking, “Man, I have a lot to learn and I am not as good as all those folks over there. Ugh, there’s always ways to get better and I gotta be thinking about how I can get better.” And here she was basically just like, “You’re great! You’re awesome! Look at how good you already are!” And I really like tapping into that energy and that feel. And that has inspired me to become my own biggest fan. Maybe that sounds kind of cheesy and cliche, but I wanna do that. I wanna become my own biggest fan. Two Ways to Play There’s two ways that all of us can gently start playing with this idea. 1️⃣ — One, we can tap into the energy of other people around us who do believe in us, who do think we’re talented, who do think we have a lot going for us, on our side, rah rah, rah, cheering us on. I can go back and kind of live in the memory of that night with my mom and see how that affects my self-concept. 2️⃣ — And then the other thing I think we can do is think about people that we believe in, that we think are talented or are doing a great job, and we’re like, “Why can’t you see what a great job you’re doing? I see what a great job you’re doing. I want you to know what a great job you’re doing.” We all have people in our lives that we believe in and so I think tapping into that energy, and remembering what it’s like to feel that for somebody else where maybe they don’t see it yet and then finding a way to direct that inward. It can be a lot harder for us to direct those good feelings, that praise and pride inward for our own accomplishments. But we can. I think the only thing we can do is practice. Let’s face it, our inner critic has become really loud and it only got really loud ‘cause we practiced the thoughts, we listened to those thoughts. It’s kind of a pervasive belief in our society of like, “ Oh, I am my own worst critic.” Everybody says that, right? It’s just like in the collective. That only happened through practice. Why aren’t we practicing something that serves us far better? The inner critic can be useful. It can help us with like healthy striving, improving, but at some point, we also have to be acknowledging how great we already are and giving ourselves credit for that. Start practicing that biggest fan voice. Start becoming your own biggest fan. It’ll be helpful for all of us. 💖 If you found this article helpful or inspiring, I’d be honored if you’d leave a comment, share it with a pal, or give a one-time donation. I’m a professional actor, a mindfulness and mindset coach, and I’m ready to help you thrive in your actor life. 🎭 I’ve been a professional actress for almost 20 years. I’ve survived 3 industry shut downs - 2 strikes and 1 global pandemic. I’ve worked in TV, film, commercials, and produced my own award-winning web series. 🧠 I’ve been a life coach for 5 years, specializing in mindfulness and neurolinguistic programming and helping people become more aware and focused on making positive changes in their lives. 💖 I blend lived experience with powerful, proven coaching tools. 🎢 Let’s get you feeling resilient, empowered, focused, playful, relaxed, confident, and riding the acting career roller coaster without throwing up! 🤗 Get my FREE Pre-Audition Focusing Meditation 🎧 I’ve created a free meditation to help you get out of your head and into your character so that you can rock your next audition. It’s going to help you calm your nerves, let go of distracting thoughts — “How can I book this? What do they want?” — and focus in on what your character wants, what’s going on in the scene, so that you can present your best work every time. Get full access to The Aligned Actor at thealignedactor.substack.com/subscribe

    3 min

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About

A podcast on mindfulness and mindset for performers. thealignedactor.substack.com