| The last professional show (where I was paid to be there) I did was probably about 1987. That was the year I decided I'd rather be a programmer than a performer. So I packed all my props away and found a job as a computer programmer.
I loved programming -- in fact, I still do. It's so cool to start with nothing and then when you're done you have something to show people. Hmmm...sounds kind of like magic...produce a dove or produce a program.
Over the years I'd dabble with magic for a few weeks at a time and then put it away again. When Copperfield would hit a city I was living in I'd go see the show, I'd always watch magic shows on TV, etc. And about once every couple years I'd end up doing a little show for the company I worked for.
I've missed performing on a regular basis. I didn't remember how much until March, 2001. I was asked by my church to do a little juggling for a benefit dinner they were having. Instead, I asked them if I could do a 25-minute show. They were thrilled and all of the sudden I had to come up with a show.
It was weird. I started putting together a show and things started falling into place. At times it felt like it hadn't actually been more than a decade since my last real show. The show went very well, and since I taped it, I was, for the first time in my life, able to watch one of my shows. (No, in all the years I performed full-time in the 80's I never taped a show.)
It was enlightening. I knew I put on a good show, but seeing it from the audience viewpoint was so cool. And it sparked something in me.
Right after that show someone asked me if I'd come to a church in a nearby town for a kids carnival. I said, "No, I don't perform anymore." But then for some strange reason I told them to give me a call next week and I'd see if I had time.
So they called, and I said yes. And I tweaked the show I'd done -- dropped a couple things and added a couple more. And did another 25-minute show about a month later.
And I was hooked.
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