Whether it’s a response from an audience, a ‘no’ at an audition, a turndown from a publisher or gallery owner, criticism and rejection are part of their creative life for many actors and other artists.
What do actors, writers and other artists, and psychologists and therapists, say about this common experience of rejection – and how to better deal with it?
“You have to develop a thick skin, but you can’t have a thick skin in your work. So it’s that constant push-pull.” – Nicole Kidman
“Initial reactions could be false predictors of your work’s ultimate legacy.” – Natalie Portman
“Often, when you have this sort of visceral reaction to being misunderstood or rejected, it’s a sign that you are carrying around some unhealed emotional trauma.” – Psychotherapist Mihaela Ivan Holtz
~~~
“You want to feel that you matter and that you count…
“And when you’re constantly being told ‘No no no’ and that your work isn’t speaking to anyone, or nothing you’re doing is making a difference to anyone…” – Sarah Paulson
~~~
Psychotherapist Mihaela Ivan Holtz helps creative people in TV/Film, performing and fine arts.
She writes in one of her articles on her site :
“Rejection lurks around every corner in the arts world.
“In fact, for you, the creative or the performer, knowing how to tolerate, be with, and work with rejection is almost a career requirement!
“Even if rejection hurts, you can learn how to turn in your favor. Rejection can actually guide you to find your true place in the world and in your art.”
She also finds:
“An unconscious fear of rejection can hold you back from finding and expressing your creative energy.
“It can interfere with you connecting with your talents and skills to transform your inspiration into your art.
“You can’t seem to find the courage to take what you create into the world.
“Creative blocks can indeed cover an unconscious fear of rejection.”
She explains:
“Here are four clues that you’re being sabotaged by your own unconscious fears:
- You feel like something may be wrong with you.
- You find yourself trying to please others much of the time.
- You feel lost and you can’t trust yourself.
- Despite having big dreams, you play small.
Continued in her article (on her site):
What If Your Fear of Rejection Was the Key to Your Creative Potential?
In another article, she writes about how deeply artists may react to rejection scenarios “that you may go through time and time again:
Imagine you’re at an audition, pitching your screenplay, or acting out a scene. You feel in touch with who you are, a little scared, perhaps, but also excited for the new possibilities.
But then, you hear a comment, or get an “I’m not interested look.”
Or, maybe you just imagine “they aren’t impressed.”
Suddenly, you’re in a very different emotional place. Instead of gentle butterflies, you begin to feel all warm and dizzy…
She continues:
Why might this kind of rejection cut so deeply?
After all, you’re an artist and you know that you constantly have to contend with how people receive and respond to your art.
Often, when you have this sort of visceral reaction to being misunderstood or rejected, it’s a sign that you are carrying around some unhealed emotional trauma.
Some past wounds related to being seen and validated have been triggered and you can’t just decide ‘I won’t let other people’s unfavorable reactions get to me.’
When those old traumas are activated, you lose control of how you feel and how you react. You’re swept into a spiral of emotion. You feel like you can’t stop or pull yourself back out.
There’s good news here: it is possible to work with your reactions to others and maintain your artistic integrity so you can continue to make your art and build your career.
- Continued in her article The Artist’s Dilemma: How To Stay True to Your Art and Connect with Your Audience.
~~~~
Nicole Kidman has commented: “I was a highly sensitive child…Most actors are highly sensitive people.
“But you have this incredible scrutiny. You have to develop a thick skin, but you can’t have a thick skin in your work. So it’s that constant push-pull…”
Being creative may increase our vulnerability to rejection – especially for those of us who have the trait of high sensitivity (sensory processing sensitivity).
And rejection can erode our self-esteem and confidence.
Julie Bjelland, LMFT is a psychotherapist and author specializing in the trait of high sensitivity, and a highly sensitive person herself. She notes not having confidence can show up in the following ways:
- not exploring your needs
- not moving forward if something isn’t perfect or being stuck in fear of failure
- not believing you are worthy or good enough
- not living a life that honors and aligns with your values
Listen to her podcast “Episode 117: Confidence: Let’s Explore Where it Comes From and How to Get it” –
Hear many more podcasts, and learn about her books, courses, articles, and other resources at JulieBjelland.com
~~~
“Initial reactions could be false predictors of your work’s ultimate legacy.” – Natalie Portman
Natalie Portman – from her Harvard Commencement Speech :
In my professional life, it also took me time to find my own reasons for doing my work.
The first film I was in came out in 1994. Again, appallingly, the year most of you were born.
I was 13 years old upon the film’s release and I can still quote what the New York Times said about me verbatim “Ms Portman poses better than she acts.”
The film had universally tepid critic response and went on to bomb commercially.
That film was called The Professional, or Leon in Europe.
[Wikipedia says “The Professional received positive reviews from critics” and other sources note the film grossed $45 to 46 million worldwide against a $16 million budget. Photo with Jean Reno.]
And today, 20 years and 35 films later, it is still the film people approach me about the most to tell me how much they loved it, how much it moved them, how it’s their favorite movie.
I feel lucky that my first experience of releasing a film was initially such a disaster by all standard measures.
I learned early that my meaning had to be from the experience of making the film and the possibility of connecting with individuals rather than the foremost trophies in my industry: financial and critical success.
And also those initial reactions could be false predictors of your work’s ultimate legacy.
I started choosing only jobs I was passionate about and from which I knew I could glean meaningful experiences. This thoroughly confused everyone around me: agents, producers, and audiences alike.
- Full Transcript: Natalie Portman Harvard Commencement Speech 2015.
- Full video: Natalie Portman Harvard Commencement Speech By Harvard University
~~~~~
More perspectives by artists on rejection:
Naomi Watts on an upside of rejections –
“Mulholland Drive (2001) was in the can at that point…So my agents were continuing to send me out for pilots. I had no money, no health insurance, and I was going on all these auditions for things I didn’t believe in but that I was desperate for because I needed the work.
“As a result, I was shaky and intense and nervous and laughing or smiling too much, and I was making people uncomfortable. It was awkward…
“In retrospect, all those disappointments were the perfect thing because if I’d gotten one of those parts I’d auditioned for, I would probably still be on some TV series today. I wouldn’t have had the freedom to pursue the things I’ve been able to do over the past few years.”
[From Interview magazine, Dec/Jan 2004; photo: Naomi Watts in Penguin Bloom, 2020.]
See much more in Private Article “Artists need to cope with rejection – always part of the arts world” – link below.
Jessica Chastain has talked about being a highly sensitive person. Many artists are.
Even after graduating from Juilliard, she “was auditioning 6 times a day, and not booking a single thing,” an article notes.
“I spent four years in Los Angeles before I ever got a film audition. And in that time I created my own curriculum,” Chastain said.
~~~~
Hailee Steinfeld on dealing with rejection as a child actor
“From 8 to about 12, I learned very quickly what rejection felt like, what going into a room full of adults expecting a lot out of you felt like.”
(See more in the much longer Private Article – link below.)
~~~~
“We actors, we’re a fragile bunch, and yet we need to be strong because 90% of our lives is rejection. You have to figure out what really is important.” – Sandra Oh
“I stopped getting hurt by the rejection and took it more as a lesson in growth.” – Daya Vaidya
“It’s a tough journey with a lot of rejection along the way. You have to have a lot of self-belief.” – Naomie Harris
~~~
“Rejection is everywhere there is an opportunity for artists.” – Rhode Island School of Design Professor Clara Lieu
“I think all great innovations are built on rejections.” – Sculptor Louise Nevelson
~~~~
“You have to have a thick skin in this business. There’s a lot of rejection.
“Shaking things off has to be an actor’s middle name!” Madison Lintz
[See more of her quotes in the longer Private Article.]
~~~
How do you respond to rejection?
Unhealthy self-criticism? Or a more healthy kind: learning from the situation, to improve? Questioning whether you are “really” an artist? Being even more fearful that you will fail?
Kristin Neff, PhD notes that the ‘typical way’ of motivating ourselves is harsh self-criticism.
“But research shows this leads to a fear of failure, performance anxiety and other problems” that can hold us back.
~~~~
Psychologist Guy Winch notes “Our brain prioritizes rejection experiences because we are social animals…”
Russell Brand refers to some of the related research in a video: “If You’ve Ever Been Rejected – Then Watch This.”
~~~~
See videos with Guy Winch, Russell Brand, Sarah Paulson, plus quotes by actors Claire Danes, Amanda Abbington, coach Mel Robbins, writer Stephen King and others, plus resources to help deal with rejection, in longer Private Article:
Artists need to cope with rejection – always part of the arts world
NOTE – Private Articles are available to subscribers. Learn more about The Creative Mind Member Community.
~~~~
Writers and rejection and endurability
“James Joyce’s Ulysses took eight years to write, and countless rejections to get published.”
Writer Rachel Simon adds, “Tenacity has always been a primary theme in the lives of successful writers: some historians believe that Plato rewrote the first sentence of The Republic fifty times; Virgil needed ten years to write the Aeneid; Gustave Flaubert’s Madame Bovary, which itself required five years of work, was not even begun until Flaubert had written, and discarded, two other novels…”
Our beliefs and preconceptions about talent and being talented can fuel a sense of inadequacy, lower esteem or decreased self-efficacy for many people, and support distorted ideas that we need to be “special” to reach high levels of excellence and achievement.
And rejection, especially the relentless, ongoing sort, can also fuel our sense of inadequacy, increase self-doubt and more.
Author Dani Shapiro recalls an essay by “the legendary editor and founder of New American Review, Ted Solotaroff.“ She quotes him from the essay:
“As far as I can tell, the decisive factor is what I call endurability: that is, the ability to deal effectively with uncertainty, rejection, and disappointment, from within as well as from without.”
J.K. Rowling wrote her first “Harry Potter” book to help overcome her depression.
After she finished that first novel, she submitted it to publishers.
“Twelve rejected it. The thirteenth publisher took a chance on her.”
~~~~
See much longer Private Article :
Writers and achievement: endurability and tenacity, not just talent
NOTE – Private Articles are available to subscribers. Learn more about The Creative Mind Member Community.
~~~~~~~
Douglas Eby (M.A./Psychology) is author of the The Creative Mind series of sites which provide “Information and inspiration to help creative people thrive.”
ø ø ø ø