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Friday, June 21, 2013

You are ALREADY Incredibly Lucky



"Every living thing is, from the cosmic perspective, incredibly lucky simply to be alive. Most, 90 percent and more, of all the organisms that have ever lived have died without viable offspring, but not a single one of your ancestors, going back to the dawn of life on Earth, suffered that normal misfortune. You spring from an unbroken line of winners going back millions of generations, and those winners were, in every generation, the luckiest of the lucky, one out of a thousand or even a million. So however unlucky you may be on some occasion today, your presence on the planet testifies to the role luck has played in your past." Daniel Dennett

A few years ago I was very interested in finding out more about my family history. My middle name is Ernest and my mom had told me the middle name came from Ernie Pyle, the war correspondent. I was curious to find out if we were related somehow. 

I also lived in Delware for awhile when I was going to grad school for acting at The Professional Theatre Training Program (PTTP) at the University of Delaware. Howard Pyle was a famous illustrator of children's books who had lived in Delaware. I was curious to find out if we were related as well. 

Growing up, everyone had always laughed at the last name Pyle and then called me Gomer, after Gomer Pyle, USMC, the television show that was a spin off of The Andy Griffin Show. I was never curious to find out if we were related, because the character of Gomer was a bumbling idiot who always did the right thing and I already felt like that most of the time growing up and didn't like when people called me that. (I still watched the show, however, and secretly liked the fact that my last name, at least, was on t.v.) In fact, one time on the bus I even punched an older, bigger kid in the head once when he wouldn't stop calling me Gomer after I asked him to many, many times. He stopped. But others still thought it was hilarious to call me Gomer and say, "Well, go-o-o-llee" to me. This was Pyle's catch phrase on the show.

So, anyway, I had always assumed that we were somehow related to the English Pyle family that could trace their family tree to Howard Pyle, the famous illustrator from Delaware. I had always assumed that because I really wanted it to be true. We had spent a lot of time living fairly close to Delaware after all and I loved art and drawing and painting, and so, we MUST somehow be related.

Then the internet got invented. (More on that in future posts.) I started doing research online and trying to dig up information about my family's history. As I do this, I find out that our original last name is not Pyle at all, but Pfeil (Arrow) in German and that we come from a line of Mennonite families who came to the U.S. to pursue religious freedom.

In a funny twist, growing up, my first real girlfriend (kisses, gifts, heartbreak) was a Mennonite girl from the same area that my original ancestor, Hienrich Pfeil, lived. Not only that, but I found out that most of my relatives were buried in a disused Mennonite Church graveyard that had been turned into a Historical Society.

I packed up the car one winter and headed to my Dad's. He lives not too far from the cemetery and I made my way out there. I passed that old elementary school where I had first fallen in love with and fought other boys over my Mennonite girlfriend with long blonde hair, glasses and a traditional hairnet, where my second grade teacher, who was also Mennonite, let me drive a horse and buggy one day in the rain when she and her beau were "sparking", where I played kickball on muggy spring afternoons not 300 yards from the bones of my ancestors, who I had no idea were buried there.

As I climbed the rocky hill just covered over with frost and searched those crumbling headstones for clues to my past, I made a few discoveries that led me to write about it in this post.

The first thing I discovered is that my family members had changed the way their name was spelled almost immediately upon arriving here. They CREATED a new identity for themselves as Americans by changing the old German spelling from Pfeil to Piel then to Pile and eventually settled on Pyle. On each generation's gravestones the name was spelled slightly differently even between husbands and wives and siblings. They were literally making a name for themselves in this new place. They were creating a new identity that seemed to fit what they were trying to accomplish.

The other discovery, and the one that directly relates to me being one of the lucky ones, happened as I moved from graves from the 1700's closer to the present day.

I found the parents of my great grandfater, Arthur Wilson Pyle, buried there. Around them were three tiny gravestones marking the death of a beloved child, each only a few years old, dated around the time of the great flu epidemics of the early part of the last century. My great grandfather was the only child to survive. He is not buried in this cemetery because he survived. He's buried in another cemetery where the Pyle's now lay peacefully on a hill. A hill where my mother is also laid to rest.

Just like the quote above, if Arthur Wilson had succumbed to the flu like his siblings, I wouldn't be here today in this form writing this blog post at 1 a.m. and feeling damn lucky to be doing so.

I AM one of the lucky ones. He was, too. He passed on his genes and drive and creating-a-name-for-himself-iveness that I carry with me and have hopefully passed on in some way to my three sons.

YOU are lucky, too, if you are reading this because your ancestors have passed on similar qualities to you that have allowed you to be here, even for this brief span of time. Feeling lucky like this is important, I think, because it gives another reason to express that luck in some way creatively.

Be lucky, YOU, LLC'ers. Follow the practices. Get out there and create instead of consuming all the time. Think of it as a way honoring those who have come before you and who were just as lucky themselves. Share your luck with the world.

Monday, June 3, 2013

Drive Traffic to your Site with Epic New Podcast: The Fizzle Show



The guys at ThinkTraffic and Fizzle, Corbett Barr, Caleb Wojcik and Chase Reeves, have created a new podcast called The Fizzle Show about creating epic content for your website, blog or online business that drives traffic to your site.

I've been following ThinkTraffic for awhile now and really appreciate the way they share their knowledge with their audience. The content is easy to read, inspiring and a lot of fun. I like to retweet their posts and I've used a few of their techniques to a greater or lesser degree of success.

I'm excited about this podcast format because I do a LOT of commuting as an actor, writer, director and educator. One of my favorite thinking times is while driving down one of the various "9s" in the Hudson Valley on my way to where I'm working. Being able to listen to The Fizzle Show guys discuss ways to build an online business by creating amazing content is going to be a huge plus for me on my journey to LLC (Living Life Creatively).

On this first podcast (there will be one each day this week, so make sure you subscribe!) they are focusing on finding your voice. This is a really important topic for bloggers and online businesses, but also for any creative endeavor like acting, writing, painting, etc. Your voice, according to the guys, is related to self-actualization - being able to see yourself how other people see you.

Writing outside of your bounds will make you sound inauthentic. Realizing for yourself that, "I can only write what I can write," can be a huge game changer. Being honest and open about your actual, authentic experience can be a big part of finding your voice. If you make your thing about discovery and learning, rather than being an "expert" it's more human, more honest and more real.

That's what my focus is here at You, LLC. The discoveries we can make together to live an authentic and creative life. Asking the questions: What does authentic and creative mean to me? How do we achieve Living Life Creatively? 

The Fizzle Show podcast is really well done and filled with great ideas about finding your voice that I don't want to give away here, including 5 Signs that You Aren't Being Yourself. I highly recommend giving them a listen if you are looking to build an online business, drive more traffic to your blog or just trying to live a more creative, nurturing, uplifting and fulfilling life. Check them out now and if you leave them a review with a question on iTunes, they will try to answer the question in the podcast.

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Favorite quotes: "We all like to be snuggled." "I feel like you haven't found your voice on finding your voice." "How to kick your watered-down self in the ass."

Stephen Pressfield "The critical fact to remember is that the writer's voice is artificial. It's an act of artifice crafted by the professional to achieve a specific effect in a work of imagination. It's not the "real" writer's voice and if you try to find your own, you'll drive yourself crazy, because YOU don't really exist and I don't either, no matter how convincingly that anybody tells us that we do or how much we choose to believe it."




Sunday, June 2, 2013

GPS for the Soul


In my search for LLC (Living LIfe Creatively) I often stumble upon apps that make promises of doing this or that to make your life better. Since one of my goals is to help you live your life in a more creative, nurturing, uplifting and fulfilling way, I wanted to share the latest app I've come across that seems to deliver on its promises.

I'm an avid reader of the Huffington Post and love Ariana's section called GPS for the Soul. Several of you discovered this blog from an article they did about my post Face the Fear.

Not only is GPS for the Soul choc-a-bloc full of great articles and ideas for living life creatively, it is now a killer app for taking time for yourself in the middle of a hectic workday and checking in with yourself to see where you are on the scale of relaxation.

By placing your finger over the camera and flash of your phone, the app checks your heart rate and the variations it is making and lets you know if you are in stress mode. It then makes recommendations on different guides you can follow in order to take a mini vacation from stress right at your desk, parked in your car or lying in bed

You can choose from many different guides: meditation, yoga, breathing exercises or inspirational slide shows and while listening to or watching the guides, a breathing guide comes on to the screen to encourage you to breathe more deeply and slowly - something I always highly encourage.

At the end of the guide, you are encouraged to check in again and I think you'll find that if you try this app when you are feeling stressed, you'll definitely feel more relaxed after using it than when you started.

Another great feature of this app is that you can create your own guides to share with others or just use for yourself. You can use music they provide or your own, add photos from your camera roll or the internet and type in affirmations and inspirational quotes. The next time you need a quick shot of inspiration, load up your personally made guide, put on your headphones, and RELAX and BREATHE to messages you've created for yourself.

If you are working on YOU, LLC, I highly recommend this easy to use and beautifully designed app to help you in your quest to live life fully and creatively. See you next time for more ways to LLC!

Thursday, May 30, 2013

How to be the Luckiest Person Alive

Tivoli Bays (a lucky place) photo by Wayne Pyle

The title of today's post comes from James Altucher's blog post about How to Be the Luckiest Guy on the Planet in 4 Easy Steps. There's a link to his original post at the bottom of this one.

He recommends 4 practices: physical, mental, emotional and spiritual

He says that when he practices these daily, he ends up being the luckiest guy alive and when he lets these practices go, he ends up in the downward spiral that I seem to find myself in right now.

So, I'm taking on Jimmy's ideas and I'll explore them here and post about how they are going for me.

I started today with the physical.

Let me preface this by saying that we lost our house a few months ago and it was quite difficult emotionally, financially, physically and mentally, but it was one of the best things that ever happened to me.

I'm not a big believer in home ownership. To me it's a really expensive box to put all of your crap in. George Carlin said that first, I believe, and I've always took it to heart. Do we really need to go in debt to the banks in order to say I "own" a home?

I don't think it's necessary.

Anyway, we lost our tiny overpriced box and had to move north of where we were living to a tiny village called Tivoli. It's a quirky place with Bard students and famous artists and blue collar workers and has a fabulous bakery and some really great restaurants, a small public library and the place where I'm writing this from - Tivoli Bays. (pictured above)

We still have not been able to get rid of the tiny overpriced box and now the neighborhood kids have been trying to steal things out of the shed that is still on the property. So I went there last night and emptied the shed, grabbed our bikes, garden tools, an artist's easel and came home.

Today, I rode that bike for the first time in more than a year. The chain slips, the gears don't work right, the thing weighs a ton, but I was able to move through space and get out of the house and it felt good and right to do that. The photo I took is a result of that ride.

I'm sitting on a dock right now typing this, instead of being in the house we are sharing with a friend, and the loons are calling and the trains are blowing their whistles and the wind is rushing through the marsh grass and I do, indeed feel lucky.

The mental aspect of James' practice is about making lists and coming up with ideas and I've been putting that into practice as well. I teach a screenwriting class at a local community college and the thing that seems to be the most difficult for some of them is coming up with ideas. James' recommendation is to make lists of ideas until your brain hurts. I made a few today, ideas for screenplays, ways to make more money with less frustrating work, book ideas, ideas for leading a more creative, nurturing, uplifting and fulfilling life. His theory, as I understand it, is that by making these lists, our brains have to fulfill some of them at some point. We get a brain itch and our bodies have to scratch it!

Emotionally, James recommends letting go of negative people in your life. One of the things I've done recently is purge negative people from my Facebook page. At first it felt scary because I genuinely like people, even the negative ones. But after I pushed that button that said "unfriend" and "block" I felt relief. I don't really use Facebook that much anymore anyway. I find it to be a giant bathroom wall with graffiti scribbled on it, "Like me", "I eat spinach", "My girlfriend dumped me", "Look how cute I am", "Come and play with me" and it's mentally exhausting. 

I do like seeing friends' photos, but I've realized that I have not really seen any of my friends face-to-face in a really long time and I want to start to change that. When I'm with friends and we are just hanging out, talking about life, laughing, playing, I feel like I've been plugged into a phone charger and my green battery signal is going up and up and up. Right now, I really only spend time with people if I'm working with them. I work and work and work and then when I get home I work some more. 

As Jack Nicholson's character in THE SHINING says, "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy." Probably an unlucky one, too.

The final practice is spiritual. I'm not religious. But, like James, I do find that reading books by spiritual leaders, practicing meditation, doing yoga, being in nature are all very spiritual things that make me feel more connected to the world. I've also found some great apps like Omvana that allow you to create and play guided meditations and that leads to a spiritual practice in a different way. I'm not connected to Omvana in any way, I just really like their app. Let me know if you try it and what you think.

Sitting out here on this dock on the bay and listening to the world existing around me is a spiritual experience and I do feel lucky to be here.

Here's the link to James' original post:

http://www.jamesaltucher.com/2011/02/how-to-be-the-luckiest-guy-on-the-planet-in-4-easy-steps/

Be lucky!

You can follow me on Twitter @waynepyle and follow James @jaltucher or buy his book How to Be the Luckiest Person Alive by clicking the link below. (As an Amazon associate, I get some pennies just to say, "Look, pennies." Thank you!)

                                                                      

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Apps and Coffee



One of the great things about blogging is that you get to do it anywhere. For awhile I was using my iPhone to enter posts directly into the Blogger app, but I've found that it crashed too often for my comfort, so I'm taking a break from the app until they make some updates that address this issue. I'm tired of crying into my coffee while I try to remember all of the great things I had just written. (P.S. I've re-downloaded the Blogger app since they recently updated and it seems to be working just fine now! Thank you Blogger. June 2, 2013)

Now I'll just grab any old laptop, pop into a local Starbucks and write away for awhile between classes or on my way to an audition, casting session or meeting. I'm there right now and I wanted to do a post about one of my new favorite things - the Starbucks app on my iPhone.  It helps me LLC by allowing me to get my drinks quickly and get back to blogging, so I thought I'd share it here. (P.S. I also like peeing here, too, @LenaDunham @jtLOL and @MichelleMalkin. What's the BIG DEAL?)

I was resistant at first. I didn't get it. My Starbucks card is on my phone? Standing in line at a Starbucks one day, I saw someone else swipe their phone in front of the scanner and walk away, drink in hand. Meanwhile, I fumbled with my wallet, tried finding my credit card, dropped change on the floor, crumpled up my receipt and tried to put my card back in my wallet and my wallet back in my pocket as I tried to carry my hot coffee, spilling it on myself and the floor before I was able to get back to my seat. First world problems, right? But I'll tell you what, this app is pretty cool.

I downloaded the app to try it, then had trouble putting money on the card. After a few unsuccessful tries, it worked! The first time I used it, I was nervous. I felt like a little kid standing in the lunch line for the first time, not knowing how much change I had to pay the lunch lady and worried that she'd yell at me. But when I swiped my phone, ding, I was done and back to my laptop with no fumbling with my wallet, no dropping of change and no dripping of my coffee.

What I didn't know about the app is that you get lots of cool rewards for using it. Free apps, games, music downloads and refills. Once you reach the GREEN level, you get free refills on your coffee drinks. I won't go into all of the details about the policy here, but a great blog called Mo' Money explains it all very clearly. Mo' Money is great money saving blog and it seems like Liz is definitely LLC'ing! Please follow her on Twitter, too.

One of the coolest free apps I want to talk about this week is the 8mm Vintage Camera app. This app really makes your video looks like it was shot with an 8mm film camera. It was used in an Oscar-winning film by Malik Bendjelloul called Searching for Sugar Man. Here's a great article on Mashable about the film: http://mashable.com/2013/02/24/iphone-app-8mm/
The filters on this app are amazing. You can shoot video that looks like it is from the 20's, the 60's, the 70's, awesome washed out color looks like Peta, Sakura, XPro and an astonishing Black and White filter called Noir. You can even add in the sound of the movie projector or shoot silently like we used to.

My Dad had an 8mm camera back in the 70's and I still have some of the old film reels. We used to fire up the projector and show them to friends when they would come to visit. My favorite story about our 8mm films is when my younger brother threatened to show a film of me taking a bath to his friends when they came over. I sneaked into the film box and switched my reel with one of him using the potty for the first time. I wasn't there, but apparently he loaded up the film to show it and when it came on with him going to the bathroom, he screamed and ran out of the room! Funny memory. Here's a short 8mm film I made on my iPhone with this amazing app by Nexvio.


If you're looking to capture that nostalgic look and feel of 8mm film, I highly recommend this app. You can definitely LLC with this one! Send me some links to your videos and I'll share them in another post. Don't forget to follow me on Twitter @WaynePyle.

Oh, and if you like to support Kickstarter projects, check out THE CABIN SISTERS with Zosia and Clara Mamet @CabinSisters. Zosia and I were in the film Rhymes with Banana and Zosia is also on @GirlsHBO with @LenaDunham.


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