It’s a documentary-style series created by Nathan Fielder in which he helps ordinary people prepare for difficult real-life conversations. His team creates elaborate like-for-like sets of where the conversation will take place, hires and directs actors to perform the other people around and the subject and an actor playing the other side runs the conversation repeatedly. They go through all possible variations, so they feel safe to have it in real life.
I didn’t go through all the variations with my actors, but I did write out their dialogue several times and on the story day, we had to rewrite it all again to make it into a musical. And believe me, I had some ideas in my back pocket, in case the competition gave us the genre of sci-fi or horror too.
The Conversation I Can’t Have
Even though I’ve gone through this process and this particular issue doesn’t keep me up at night anymore, I still don’t feel comfortable confronting these theological differences in person.
Possibly, because I went down the fiction route with the film and I didn’t do what “The Rehearsal” does.
I don’t know.
But I am still afraid that if I voice these things out, I could be excluded from the group. Because I often hear “watch out for those who cause divisions… keep away from them.”
There is a lot of tension between what I believe about caring for our world and what I am still hearing around me, thrown around carelessly, as verses picked out of context. The tension between caring for this world now and believing this world doesn’t matter because heaven is what counts: “Set your mind on things above, not on the earth”, “save souls for heaven”, “focus on your own sins, not institutional injustice”, “God has it covered”, “it is by grace you will be saved… not by works”.
So, I don’t know how to start the conversation without it becoming conflict.
Art feels safer than speech. So, I made a musical.
Why Fiction? Filmmaking, Puppets, and Therapy
Writing and filmmaking are my go-to artistic expressions, but you don’t have to be an experienced filmmaker to try the positive benefit of reenacting difficult situations.
Roleplaying is our most intuitive way of processing emotions. Left to their own devices, children use their toys to go and rerun conversations they’ve heard or been part of. If we did that more as adults, outwardly, not just in our heads, we’d process our difficult emotions too.
Writing is fantastic and free but not everyone can sit and focus in front of a blank page. Some of us need something more visual and tactile.
We can use our kids plus toys or puppets and throw ourselves into silly improv. We can play all characters or grab a friend or our partner and roleplay each other or other people.
Made-up characters can say what we can’t.
Making up songs helps too, singing lowers our guard when we’re feeling too self-conscious even if we’re by ourselves.
And if we end up recording let’s say a puppet show, for our own or the entertainment of others, even if our characters are fighting with each other, this adds to the power of storytelling.
Fiction creates emotional distance that makes truth easier to digest without our viewers feeling attacked for seeing things differently.
Watching It Back and What I Learned
Watching “If You Don’t Act, Then Were You Even Here” with an audience at its London screening last year pulled me out of it feeling so personal. It was wonderful to hear that it wasn’t as niche as I thought either, because people who were not Christian found it relevant. The issue of different values across different generations in the same family felt universal.
Being able to have deep conversations with people who disagree without completely shutting each other out is hard for everyone. And when those people are family, it can be heartbreaking.
Every time I watch the film though, it feels exhilarating to hear my thoughts outside myself. This film helped me crystalise what I was trying to say. It clarified my own feelings around the issues we raised in it.
It is quite the relief to have it out, but I still haven’t shown it to church people.
And maybe that’s OK.
A Gentle Note for Anyone Who Knows Me
This film is not an accusation. It isn’t aimed at anyone in particular.
It’s an exploration of a tension I was personally feeling at the time.
If you recognise yourself in it, that’s not because I put you there. It is because the themes are bigger than any one person or community.
“If You Don’t Act, Then Were You Even Here”
Here is the film. I encourage watching with curiosity, not agreement, regardless of which side you may take.