Here's the setup. Ten women sing, five go home, and the outcome is decided during that show by the judges. (This is before the pubic voting started.) One of the contestants sang something very dear to her, but not, shall we say, in her wheelhouse. It was a risk. The song meant a lot to her personally, which meant she had passion and she did okay, but the judges couldn't envision her on a big venue stage someday with that kind of song.
Her response was something along the lines of (and I'm wildly paraphrasing here): "I took a chance; if I go home, I know I gave it my all." Okay, maybe that wasn't so wild. The judges are always saying things like, "step out of your comfort zone" and "that song was a safe choice but next week we'd like to see you do something different." Then they turn around and say, "dude, that wasn't the right song for you, dog." (I'm not quoting Keith Urban, in case you aren't sure.)
What if she'd said, "I took a chance; if I go home, I have a nice job waiting?" Doesn't that change how you feel about her song choice? Maybe how you feel about her entire performance?
Which got me thinking. Is it better in life to have a safety net, a Plan B?
Yes, says my conservative self. Plan B lets you
take risks with Plan A. For example, if a circus aerialist swings, somersaults, but then misses that next bar and falls, she will still land in the
net. Otherwise she might not reach for that higher bar or do that extra somersault or take
that risk. It's smart to be safe. It's smart to plan ahead. What idiot does an extra somersault in mid-air without a net?
No way do you want a Plan B, says my inner risk-taker. Having Plan B means you
don't give it your all while attempting Plan A. You always wonder if you felt safe during A (complacent?) because having a Plan
B means you can't fail either way. So you don't risk, don't sing the harder
song on Idol, don't put your all into it because it's okay if you fail since
you have Plan B. Your effort is divided. Or you do risk, but it's not as crucial to win. Your competitive edge is blunted.
See my problem? Let's say the show is called Sing For Your Supper and winning the judges' approval means that woman (now my heroine) could eat that night. And she's starving, having spent all her money getting to Vegas. She's been sleeping in her car for three weeks. Unable to afford dinner, she drank water and ate some fries off her friend's plate. Two days ago.
Wouldn't she be crazy not to sing the safe song and ensure her spot for one more week--and her dinner finally that night? Or should she give it her all, trying to stay in the competition (and eat) by outshining everyone with this song that means the world to her?
Please weigh in. Risk taker or safety net?
Megan
Megan Kelly
www.megankellybooks.com
9 comments:
Megan,
Good question! Me, I'm a Plan B kind of gal. I sleep better at night knowing that if something doesn't go according to plan, there's another road I can take.
My characters, though, they have to put it all on the line, risk everything, in order to achieve the love and happiness they deserve.
Leigh
For American Idol - now that they are down to 10 boys and 10 girls - the top 10 are voted in by us. I voted both nights with the 50 votes I was allocated. Although, I do expect a Top 12 with a couple of Judge's picks too
I'm a risk taker. It hasn't always been the wisest decision, but those risks got me published with Harlequin and living where I am now. Safe is easy - sometimes too easy. I think your heroine is brave and following her heart by taking a risk. If you can't be true to yourself, who can you be true to?
Me too, Leigh. I like security when I take a risk. LOL
Tammy, watching Idol now. I haven't seen all the episodes, but I'm mostly watching for Keith Urban anyway.
Amanda, our characters have to be brave, have to step out of their comfort zones. That's what makes them interesting.
I am a risk taker. I don't look for a plan B until Plan A is dead in the water. I'm not a foolish risk taker. I don't jump out of airplanes without a parachute. This woman was following her dream. She set out to sing this song. She did it. How exciting for her! She already won everything that was important. Tomorrow she can go about getting a job and finding food again.
Wow, Linda S, that's gutsy, just like American heroines. :)
I've never been much of a risk taker, I usually take the safest path. I have actually given up on American Idol, haven't watched it since David Cook won. I'm hooked on The Voice now.
Post a Comment