I've always loved films and since 2011 I've been making my own short films under the banner of Winward Studios. These have all been made on little to no money, using equipment and props I already own or can lend, and my cast has always been made up of friends and family. All my skills have been self taught through trial and error as well as the aid of YouTube tutorials. For all of my films, I have acted as the sole crew member. So I've been responsible for writing, directing, editing, and even starring at times. This hobby has been the escape needed for me and my mental health.
In the early days, I had this dream of making a "proper film". I dreamed of being able to go into HMV and see a DVD on a shelf with my name on it. As the years went on, my faith in myself waned and I had a "reality check", I accepted my limitations and that my filmmaking skills would go no further than my own YouTube uploads. Despite having won several local and more widespread awards for my shorts, I came to the conclusion that this was it. Filmmaking for me would go no further than being a passionate hobby.
Life continued on, over the course of the last 10 years I had moved from working in a shop to working nights in a factory, and became a father TWICE. Then lockdown hit, my mental health deteriorated further and I began to struggle at work. All I had in life was home and work, I had no escape anymore. During this time, I got new ideas for shorts, I was limited to filming in my home and having myself, my partner and children as the stars, but this worked. I even made a project called Isolation Compilation where I asked everyone I knew to participate by filming themselves catching a toilet roll from off screen and then passing it on, showing what they're doing to survive lockdown. This was pretty successful, not everyone participated but I was happy with the turnout. But even with these new projects, I continued to struggle at work.
In 2021, I was officially diagnosed Autistic which allowed me to access help I hadn't previously. This helped with limited success. Then I made a decision I never thought I would make. I decided to quit my job, and return to education. I decided to do another degree (my previous one being in Photography), but this time in what I should have done 13 years earlier; Film and Television Production.
I was very anxious about this decision, constantly questioning whether it was the right move. But so far, returning to education has been the best decision I could have possibly made at that time in my life. Sure, I'm one of the oldest in the class. Sure, the age gap is practically a generation difference. But, everyone has been lovely and inviting, and made me feel like one of them. Social skills are not my strong suit, but I feel so at ease with my fellow students. It's great being surrounded by such creative types. I love spending time with them and being creative together. I even have plans with some of them to make short films together, but in a much more professional capacity than I've ever been able to manage in the past, i.e. not just me acting as the full crew, and the ability to loan out professional equipment from the University. I feel I'm reigniting my decade old dream and reinventing myself at the same time. I feel like I'm in a good place.
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