In an Aaron Sorkin walk-and-talk-like style, I made my way through the space, answered questions, delegated tasks, and did everything I could to make sure that our show, La Cage, would have a successful opening night.
A blur of lights, sound checks, last-minute fires to put out, and pep talks…I find myself sitting in the theater giving the stage manager the go. It’s happening. I debated leaving the space, not sure if I was more afraid of the strangers, my closest friends, the critics or not. I recognized the Upper Limit Problem I was trying to create and I decided to sit down, ground myself, and trust.
The music started and I was flooded with emotion and transported back to a different chair, a wheelchair, I had to use five years earlier when relearning to walk. And then again to my chair in Circle at MEA months earlier in March. Full body chills as I realized everything that had transpired to lead to this moment had been whispered in Baja and encouraged by my time there.
As Shelley Paxton and Christine Sperber taught me, I had redefined success. A little more on that. I decided that for the show’s opening, success for me was not going to be how well it was received or the sound of applause. Success would be if at the end of the week, I could look my compadres in the eyes and tell them I priortized reamining calm, used conscious communication and treated everyone with kindness regardless how high tensions got. If I could say yes that’s what success would FEEL like for me. I also got that secondary tingle that some refer to as a BAJA-AHA, when I realized I had in fact completely rewritten my success script. Making what seemed like impossible shifts personally and professionally to arrive at this very moment.
When I was at MEA, three different people, including my mentor Chip Conley, suggested I read “The Big Leap” by Gay Hendricks. I took that as a divine sign and will also make the biggest admission of guilt – I ended up stealing it from the MEA library. (Sorry Chip, I hope this blog makes it worth it). I referenced his concept of Upper Limit Problems earlier – our tendency to keep ourselves just short of fully experiencing our full potential. I had been living in my Zone of Excellence as Hendricks would put it, and sitting in that chair, connected to those other chairs that have supported me in my life, I felt for a moment what it was like to undeniably be in one’s Zone of Genius. I also have to acknowledge the Los Angeles-based MEA community who showed up in every way imaginable during this process to champion me and my project. Thank you MEA, my compadres, and the magic of Baja for inviting me to whisper what I was ready for into the ocean and let it come back to me.
At the opening night after-party, I was introduced as Addison, Co-Producer and Associate Director. Not the grief guy, not the boy who lived, not the grief author and speaker. My introduction did not invite anyone to tell me about death or their latest unbearable loss. I was free, hiding in plain sight and ever-present. It was a wild invitation to leave the safety of the caterpillar chrysalis and fly for the night. Knowing full well this cycle of transition will go on and on. Thank you MEA, and I will bring the book back as soon as I can.
-Addison
Addison Brasil is an MEA Alum who shows up in the world as a Producer, Writer, and currently the Associate Director of La Cage! Live at the Hollywood Roosevelt. Author of First Year of Grief Club and host of Grief Club: The Podcast – www.addisonbrasil.com