VOCAL HEALTH Are You Stressed? Exhausted? Here's 12 Ways To Avoid Voice Over Fatigue June 30, 2015 Dave Courvoisier Voice Actor & TV News Anchor You’ll find it right there in the Voice Over Dictionary: VO Fatigue: "…a psycho/physiological syndrome exhibited by the accumulative stress and exhaustion resulting from the endless pursuit of freelance voice over success…”We’ve all been there. The syndrome strikes irrespective of age, gender, race, time of year, time of day, or relative humidity. Some of the ore obvious signs and signals are:
That can mean good things … like when that big fat check comes in for a long project you just completed. But more often than not, it means the strain of constantly propping-up the business with the sheer force of your will. Day after day, week after week, the success of this endeavor depends on you. Your energy. Your talent. Your determination. Your resourcefulness. WHAT TO DO? Unless you take some intercessory steps here ‘n’ there, the pressure of it can lead to VO Fatigue. Herewith, then, my 12+ Ways to Avoid VO Fatigue: 1. Walk Away Leave the premises. See a movie. Waste time in the park with your dog. You’d be surprised how much good an hour can do engaged in something mindless. Severe cases may require a coupla days…even a week. Plan for it. Then do it. Everybody needs a break, even freelancers. 2. Call a Friend No one is going to "get” your situation more than a trusted friend (esp. a VO friend). If a friend called you, wouldn’t you listen? Reverse the roles, and fire away. One of these days he/she will call, and you can return the favor. 3. Cut Your Losses Two ways this works:
4. Maintain Your Health How many times have you heard "if you have your health, you have everything”? A strong constitution will see you through a lot of trials and troubles. Not that you should abuse it, but when you are in good shape, you can push the envelope a little more and not suffer for it.This includes getting enough sleep! 5. Ask for Help Chances are someone has just the answer to your quandary, or your predicament, or frustration. Like "call a friend”, there is no shame in raising a red flag and seeking assistance. Online. On the phone. Via Skype. Float a balloon, be amazed how quickly someone grabs it. 6. Keep a Routine Routines are funny things. On a creative day, routine can seem like a ball ‘n’ chain, but when you’re reached a point of fatigue, the comfort factor of a routine can put you back on the rails. A routine adds structure that will see you through frustration. 7. No Excuses, No Procrastination If it gets that bad, utilize #1 above (take a walk). Put your big britches on and face the music. Like Nike, Just Do It. I’ve often convinced myself that a five-minute hurdle is bigger than Mt. Everest. It’s not. Think through the task, and you’ll realize it’s not that bad. 8. Realize Rejection Is Not Personal This is HUGE in our business. What’s the saying? "Audition, then forget it.” Get more coaching, sure. Improve your demo, yeah. But hand-wringing over a lost audition is wasted tears. Move on. 9. Have a Strategy for Eventuality You KNOW fatigue is gonna hit you sooner or later. Plan for it. I’m serious. Write out a step-by-step escape plan, seal it in an envelope, and keep it in a safe place. When the gremlins get to be too much … break open the envelope, and follow your plan to the letter. 10. Curry Non-VO Friendships Not that voice actors aren’t the most charming people in the world, but balance is a good thing. Don’t neglect old friendships from school or an earlier career, or even the next-door-neighbor who re-upholsters furniture for a living. It helps you to put things in perspective. 11. Get One Thing Done It can be really small. Just do it, and do it right. Take a moment to revel in the instant of the achievement, then maybe tackle something a little harder. We all want a "win.” Parlay one win into another. 12. Take a Social Media Break (or watch mindless TV) A half-hour on FaceBook or Twitter will usually shake you out of your blues, and you’ll soon realize one of two things:
When I least wanted to, my daughter used to call to me to come and see something. It was usually stupid cat videos on YouTube, but I gotta admit, the chuckle (or belly-laugh) it gave me brought me out of my funk. Keep good humor, and spread good humor. Making others laugh is magical. --------------------- ABOUT DAVE
Dave Courvoisier is an Emmy Award-winning broadcaster, writer, producer, voice actor, and the main weeknight news anchor on KLAS-TV, Channel 8, the Las Vegas CBS affiliate. He also writes Voice-Acting in Vegas, a daily blog of voice over adventures, observations and technology, and is author and publisher of the book, More Than Just A Voice: The Real Secret To VoiceOver Success. Email: CourVO@CourVO.com Web: http://www.courvo.com Blog: http://www.courvo.biz More Than Just A Voice: http://courvo.com/more-than-just-a-voice Your Daily Resource For Voice-Over Success
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It sounds counter-intuitive, but working hard and pushing through obstacles doesn't always yield the best results. Sometimes you need another perspective, and you'll trust your *own* perspective if you take the time to write down your best ideas at a time when you're NOT burnt out (and cranky).
we push ourselves over the brink.
Thanks a bunch, Dave.
You mention irascibility: snatching up the heavy hose reel, my back went out for the first time ever. Agony. I should have recorded the screams for portfolio. Only now beginning to move around - that's two or three weeks lost. Completely self-inflicted.