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My life's routine. So I tried being a stand-up

Nick Gendler describes how he fulfilled his ambition to be a comedian

January 27, 2012 10:59
Nick Gendler: having  a laugh at Limmud

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Anonymous,

Anonymous

3 min read

For a man approaching 50, 2011 turned out to be a year of personal growth and discovery when I might have assumed I knew all there was to know about myself. Never particularly ambitious and more interested in knowing a little about a lot than being a specialist (and therefore not a bad person to have on your table at a supper quiz), I have tended not to wander far from my area of comfort. However, last year I changed. I felt it was time to push myself, partly to see what would happen.

In the summer I cycled 15 miles up the iconic Mount Ventoux in southern France. Slowly, I'll grant you, in fact significantly more slowly than my two friends, although they were not burdened by my belly. When I reached the top, I pretty much burst into tears at the accomplishment, having inched and strained my way up the mountain with more determination than I could remember applying to any previous endeavour. My emotions comprised a mixture of utter exhaustion, delight at overcoming myself, and anger at realising how many times I had needlessly given up on something in the past through lack of self-belief. I knew I had given everything and this was a novel feeling.

That bike ride gave me the confidence to see new challenges as potentially rewarding rather than as opportunities to fail, and this has altered the way I look at life.

Over the years I have written for pleasure and public consumption, yet hankered after experiencing an immediate reaction to my work. I have long considered that it is one thing to receive no letters of appreciation from a remote audience, and quite another to be there in the room with an audience failing to show its approval.

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