Scott Steindorff – The Struggle & Search For Your Authenticity
The cocaine made his throat close. “I was about to die”.
He wanted to be an actor. He wanted to be creative. He had dreams. And working real-estate for his father wasn’t one of them. “I didn’t want to come down,” he said.
“Why’d you do it?”
“I really wasn’t happy with myself,” he said. “I believe it was because I wasn’t my authentic self doing what I really wanted to do in my life.”
“Nepotism got me the job.”
And it was killing him. He was suffocating.
Now Scott Steindorff is the producer of “Empire Falls,” “Chef,” (one of my all time favorite movies), “The Lincoln Lawyer,” “Love in the Time of Cholera,” and more.
He’s worked with Paul Newman, Jon Favreau, Robert Downey Jr., Matthew McConaughey, Scarlett Johansson, the list goes on.
The other day he called me, a few days after we shot the project, to tell me about brand new projects he was working on that were different than anything he had done before. He is constantly testing the limits of his creativity.
I wanted to know how he became his “authentic self.” How did he go from being depressed and self-medicated to a successful and happy movie producer?
I wanted to know because I don’t think we ever really know. I think part of self-awareness is never quite getting there but always moving (hopefully) in the right direction. And creativity is something that needs to be constantly reinvented.
Once creativity stays the same, it is no longer creative. Scott found a way to constantly be creativity. I want to learn how.
“It’s not easy at all,” he said. “You have to do the leg work.”
“What’s the leg work?” I asked
Here’s what he said:
Step 1: FIND OUT WHAT YOU’RE CRAVING
These are the two types of cravings:
a) Depletion: Your body needs something. It can be water, a vitamin or mineral or a change. That’s where reinvention comes in.
b) Addiction: I felt powerless. I was addicted to money. More was never enough. Then I left Wall Street. Because they were the supplier.
Scott wanted euphoria. He craved it.
“I grew up wanting to be a skier and an actor and here I was in an office making money,” Scott said. “I started craving that feeling of euphoria and excitement and passion for life.”
So he started doing cocaine.
“Nobody knew I had a problem,” he said. ” I would do it by myself. So when I checked into rehab, it was a shock to my family.”
The patients had to drink some type of alcohol until they threw up. “By the second day, I said to the doctor, ‘This isn’t working for me. I’m a cocaine addict not an alcoholic.”
He thought they’d try something new. He thought they’d help.
No.
“Well… leave,” the doctor said.
“There was a shift in my consciousness. I went to my room. I cried uncontrollably for 24 hours. All the stress and pressure left me and from that moment on I haven’t used for almost 33 and a half years.”
“What do you mean the stress left you?” I said. I couldn’t imagine. He told me it just left. No explanation. He just saw his own choice. And he took it.
I think most people don’t know what they really want in life.
We talked about adapting. And I said it seems like you have to surrender and be okay with the changes… even while you’re depressed.
“Isn’t depression a lack of your expression?” he said. I never thought of it that way. Maybe I’m filling one need with sand when I really crave water.
Step 2: ASK QUESTIONS
I’m not in a 12-step program, but I want to understand who I am as my authentic self. So I asked what can I do right now?
“Ask yourself questions,” he said. “How Am I feeling? How do I feel about myself, do I love myself, am I feeling less than? Do I feel guilt?”
“But what if you’re lying to yourself?”
“You can’t lie to yourself,” he said. “You’re just denying the truth. If you’re listening to this, it’s coming to the surface. Don’t push it down.”
Step 3: ACT IT OUT
It’s easy to come up with ideas. It’s harder to act on them. I always say, actions are more important than words, which are more important than thoughts.
It’s not about one skill set. It’s about how you meld them together and act on them.
Scott laughed and said, “I have very few skills in life…”
I didn’t quite believe him. He had skills to do real estate. To make movies. To be creative. I have skills.
But we always compare ourselves to what the “next level” is. And I can’t help it. I do it also. So, again, it’s the direction that counts. And fully engaging in the process.
Scott would surrender. If an opportunity presented itself, and it excited his need for creativity, he would say “yes”.
It never hurts to try the next steps in whatever endeavor presents itself. Try it on like you try an outfit to see if you want to wear it for the summer. See if it fits. See if you love it. And if you do, go all in.
Scott’s story is not about movies, or addiction, or creativity, it’s about knowing the right direction to take the next step.
Step 4: MAKE SMALL CHANGES EVERYDAY
Scott quit his dad’s real-estate firm.
“Was he supportive?” I asked.
They didn’t talk for two years…
Scott became a millionaire. He was still in real-estate, though. And unhappy. Then the market crashed.
“It crushed me,” he said.
Scott changed careers every five years or so. Now he’s 56. And he’s working on a Joan of Arc movie, a new TV series based in the Bahamas, and a script for “Station 11.”
Any time he liked a book, he’d try to buy the movie rights. Then he’d try to get the movie made. Sometimes it would work. Sometimes it would be a massive success. But always he tried, starting with the simplest step.
The story he told me was a combination of luck, learning skills, building a network, and acting on the intersection of all of the above. But more than anything, it’s being open to surrender. Surrendering to constant reinvention.
Reinvention is a habit not an event.
James Altucher is the author of the bestselling book Choose Yourself, editor at The Altucher Report and host of the popular podcast, The James Altucher Show, which takes you beyond business and entrepreneurship by exploring what it means to be human and achieve well-being in a world that is increasingly complicated.
An interesting and useful post. In particular, your comment about the authentic-self sparked a question. That we are seeking our authentic-self means we are currently living through our inauthentic-self. We are now asking our inauthentic-self to work towards being replaced by the authentic-self, and dissolved out of existence. Do we think our inauthentic-self really wants this and is happy to support itself ceasing to exist? This makes me wonder how you are sure that the inauthentic-self is not deceiving us and creating illusions that we have actually found our authentic self to continue its own existence? I suppose the same question could be asked of the real/unreal and true/untrue self. How do you know, in practice, you've actually found/are your authentic self?
Maguire Clan Motto "Fortitude and Justice are Invincible". Mature, Adaptive, Honest, Frank, Reliable Learner Artist
7 年reinvention has not been my key nor has surrender. My experience has been learning to see my skills in a new way and apply them in new direction s one step at a time. One of the greatest things that leads to more confidence through self awareness.
Social Innovation Consultant
7 年Fantastic article. Thank you for sharing this story!
Healthcare | AI | Innovation
7 年This is incredible timing. Thank you James Altucher for writing this piece! In Steve Pressfield's War of Art the concept of curing cancer via finding your authentic self and serving the self (aka aligning your life to your calling and your passions) is explored. Could depression and cancers and other inflammatory illnesses (e.g. autoimmune diseases) be a resultant signal from "the muses" that something is flagrantly wrong with how you're spending your life? It's a valid question that deserves further research. I've never seen a study that looks at rates of the aforementioned diseases as a percent of population in cohorts of entrepreneurs vs. the traditionally employed "9-5" workforce. Now I'm curious...again thanks for this thought provoking post. All the best!