The July Digest
Flow state, full plate, and the grit of showing up before it all makes sense.
There’s a section in The Artist’s Way where Julia Cameron writes that the muse shows up once you start working. That you can’t wait for inspiration - you have to meet it halfway, allow it to find you while you’re in process. It’s not a foreign ideal - Twyla Tharp also touches on it in The Creative Habit.
This month, I feel like I threw open the door, sprinted toward it, and now I’m caught in the warm, determined current of something faster, bigger, and more aligned than I could’ve planned for myself.
July was a lot. A full, expansive, brimming kind of month. One of the busiest I can remember, and easily one of the most creatively productive. The floodgates burst open, the water keeps coming, and I have 79 mental tabs open across innumerable projects and responsibilities in different stages - while still opening more.
What’s wild is: I don’t feel like I’m drowning. I don’t feel like I’m losing control. And as someone with a long-standing tendency to overbook, overwork, and overstretch to outrun the terror of “free time” - that’s saying something.
I feel clear. Directed. Electric.
I laid out a creative sprint for myself at the start of the month, mapping July through mid-September - scene work, studio time, multiple classes, The Actor Diaries upgrades, collaborations, physical training, writing, filming, planning. And then July looked at my Notes outline and said: “Cute. Here’s more.”
Dream interviews. New mentors. Photo shoots. Reels. Projects I didn’t even know were mine to conceptualize yet. Viable through lines I hadn’t recognized before. Possibility on possibility. Somehow, I’ve never felt more capable of holding it all - and more.
Because here’s the thing: creative work begets more creative work. You don’t wait for it to flow. You build the conditions for it, brick by brick, scene by scene, late night by cold brew-fueled afternoon. You don’t want to feel ready. You move, and readiness finds you mid-step, nudging your heel that inch further.
This month, I re-learned how much clarity lives on the other side of action. How much momentum compounds when you’re brave enough to start. How divine downloads (if you trust that kind of thing - I do) tend to land when you’re already in motion.
I’ve had moments this month - in my car, on a hiking trail, between scene study notes and script breakdowns - where I’ve felt a crackling, almost cosmic sense of guidance. Like I’m being nudged. Pointed. Whispered to.
And yes - some old patterns tried to claw their way back in. The perfectionism. The people-pleasing. The timeline comparisons and tangled “shoulds.” Because the version of me writing this is clear on where she’s headed, and has a body of work behind her from the last four weeks to prove it. She’s not just dreaming anymore, she’s en route.
I don’t think I’ve ever generated this much output in a single month, across this many mediums, with this much intentionality. And August is about to be even bigger. More work. More play. More joy and stretch and film and performance. More of me, showing up in every room like it’s already mine - like it’s been waiting for me to cross the threshold.
So before we dive into this month’s recommendations, I want to mark this: The flow I’m in right now wasn’t luck. It wasn’t handed to me. It was build. Brick by brick. Choice by choice. Discipline by discipline.
And if you’re reading this wondering when your own wave is going to come, maybe it’s already rising beneath you. Maybe the only thing left is to start paddling.
The Reads: The Lover by Marguerite Duras, Sex and Rage by Eve Babitz, Elemeno Pea by Molly Smith Metzler, and Respect for Acting by Uta Hagen (a much-needed, required re-read).
The Watchlist: 1923 Season Two (I still can’t talk about it), Sorry, Baby by Eva Victor (one of the best things I’ve seen this year), Miss Julie by Liv Ullmann, Superman by James Gunn, Eddington by Ari Aster… and the embarrassing number of other films I saw this month courtesy of AMC Stubs A-List (I won’t fully expose myself on the internet, but it’s over/under ten).
LA Theatre Edit: Reel to Reel by Rogue Machine Theatre x Horsechart Theatre.
What I’m Loving: OSEA Seabiotic Water Cream, Alter Eco Mint Blackout Organic Dark Chocolate, Elmhurst Plant-Based Milks (no gums or emulsifiers!), Youth To The People Superfood Cleanser, Community Goods (unfortunately it is, in fact, worth the line), Maranatha Almond Butters, too many pints of blueberries, and lots (lots) of kitchari.
Mantra: I’m not waiting - I’m becoming.