To fully understand Matthew McConaughey—actor, spiritual advisor, and all-around good-time man—one must first understand the concept of “greenlights.” Fortunately, McConaughey lays it out clearly. “Unflinchingly honest and remarkably candid, Matthew McConaughey’s book invites us to grapple with the lessons of his life as he did - and to see that the point was never to win, but to understand.” (Mark Manson, author of The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F.ck). “Matthew McConaughey is a talented actor, a fine writer, but a total genius at living. He attacks life with an exhilarating ferocity. This is a wildly unexpected and delightful book you can’t just read, you have to experience.” –Lawrence Wright, author of The End of October. “Don’t walk into a place like you wanna buy it, walk in like you own it.” ― Matthew McConaughey. Matthew McConaughey’s memoir might just be one of the best surprises of 2020. Greenlights is based on over three decades of his personal journals, and is sprinkled throughout with clips of pages and writings and photos. In the popular imagination, the Oscar winner’s reputation is.
Greenlights with Matthew McConaughey
In his recent memoir, Greenlights, legendary actor Matthew McConaughey recounts the last fifty years of his life through gripping storytelling, offering advice that transcends all to focus on the rules of life itself. Whether you are a writer or not, you need to own your work, be arrogant before you can appreciate being humbled, and that the uncertainty of losing a safety net only makes it easier to embrace your actions and responsibilities. McConaughey is an Academy Award-winning actor and producer who first became popular for his breakout role in the 1993 comedy Dazed and Confused and has since starred in countless successful movies including Dallas Buyers Club, Interstellar, and The Gentlemen. To purchase his excellent new memoir, follow the link below.
From Amazon.com:
Academy Award-winning actor Matthew McConaughey is a married man, a father of three children, and a loyal son and brother. He considers himself a storyteller by occupation, believes it’s okay to have a beer on the way to the temple, feels better with a day’s sweat on him, and is an aspiring orchestral conductor.
Whether you’re traditionally published or indie, writing a good book is only the first step in becoming a successful author. The days of just turning a manuscript into your editor and walking away are gone. If you want to succeed in today’s publishing world, you need to understand every aspect of the business – editing, formatting, marketing, contracts. It all starts with a good book, then the real work begins.
Join international bestselling author J.D. Barker and indie powerhouses, J. Thorn and Zach Bohannon, as they gain unique insight and valuable advice from the most prolific and accomplished authors in the business.
In this episode, you’ll discover:
- The last time Matthew McConaughey was knocked out by a sleeping cow
- Why he needed courage to write Greenlights
- How to choose the best POV for the messages you want to convey
- Why you should be less impressed, more involved
- The importance of making sacrifices
Links:
Complete the listener survey by 11:59 p.m. Eastern on February 28, 2021 and win a chance for a private one-on-one consultation with J. D. Barker! – https://forms.gle/CZ6HBP5Kyy1pm2YZ9
J. D. Barker – http://jdbarker.com/
J. Thorn – https://theauthorlife.com/
Matthew McConaughey on Amazon.com – https://amzn.to/3d8mv30
Greenlights – https://books2read.com/greenlights
Findaway Voices February Promo – https://love.findawayvoices.com/
Story Rubric – http://storyrubric.com
Nonfict Rubric – http://nonficrubric.com
The Career Author Summit 2021 – https://thecareerauthor.com/summit2021/
Proudly sponsored by Kobo Writing Life – https://kobowritinglife.com/
Music by Nicorus – https://cctrax.com/nicorus/dust-to-dust-ep
Voice Over by Rick Ganley – http://www.nhpr.com and recorded at Mill Pond Studio – http://www.millpondstudio.com
Contact – https://writersinkpodcast.com/contact/
*Full disclosure: Some of the links are affiliate links.
Print | Audiobook | Kindle
My Thoughts
Greenlights is the biography of the first 50 years of Matthew McConaughey’s life. He is a great storyteller and narrates the audio version himself, which makes it even better. Listening to the book feels like sitting in his home while he tells you his life story. There are many pearls of wisdom in his stories.
My Favorite Quotes
- Knowing the truth, seeing the truth, and telling the truth are all different experiences.
- To lose the power of confrontation is to lose the power of unity.
- It’s better to jump than to fall.
- The intellect should simplify things, not make them more cerebral.
- We often don’t get what we want because we quit early or we didn’t take the necessary risk to get it.
- We are all made for every moment we encounter.
- If we stay in process and within the joy of the doing, we will never choke at the finish line.
- Have immortal finish lines.
- Sometimes which choice you make is not as important as making a choice and committing to it.
- Some people look for an excuse to do, others look for an excuse not to.
- It is not about whether you win or lose, it’s about accepting the challenge. When you accept the challenge you have already won.
- Great leaders are not always in front, they also know who to follow.
- We must be aware of what we attract in life, because it is no accident or coincidence.
- Time and truth, two constants you can rely on. One shows up for the first time, every time, while the other never leaves.
- I hope to give my children an opportunity to find what they love to do, work to be great at it, pursue it, and do it.
What’s a Greenlight?
Green lights mean go! We don’t like yellow and red lights, but sometimes they give us what we need.
Catching greenlights is about skill, intent, context, consideration, endurance, anticipation, resilience, speed, and discipline. We can catch more greenlights by simply identifying where the red lights are in our life, and then change course to hit fewer of them.
Catching greenlights is also about timing, the world’s and ours. We can catch them by sheer luck by being in the right place and the right time.
This is a book about how to catch more yeses in a world of nos.
Part One: Outlaw Logic: A Wednesday Night, 1974
His parents taught him not to hate, never say “I can’t” and to never lie.
Words are momentary; intent is momentous.
His parents didn’t hope they would follow the rules, they expected it.
A denied expectation hurts more than a denied hope. A fulfilled hope makes us happier than a fulfilled expectation. Hope has a higher return on happiness.
The value of denial depends on one’s commitment to it. His mom beat cancer twice on nothing more than aspirin and denial.
Matthew grew up thinking he had won the “Mr. Texas” award as a child. It wasn’t until 2019 that he noticed the photo of him “winning” actually said runner-up.
Knowing the truth, seeing the truth, and telling the truth are all different experiences.
His dad made sure his children learned the fundamentals before expressing their individualism.
To lose the power of confrontation is to lose the power of unity.
Conservative early, liberal late. Create structure so you can have freedom. Earn your Saturdays. We need discipline, guidelines, context, and responsibility early in any new endeavor. This is the time to sacrifice, learn, observe, and take heed. If and when we get knowledge of the space (the craft, people, and plan), then we can create. Creativity needs borders.
Part Two: Find Your Frequency: Spring 1988
In high school he was really popular and drove his truck around school with a megaphone on the front, he would take girls mudding after school. He sold his truck for a red sports car and lost his popularity.
When he sold his truck in high school, he lost the effort, hustle and fun. He was too busy leaning against his sports car. He had gotten lazy and was relying on the sports car to “do the work” for him.
Process of Elimination and Identity
The first step that leads to our identity is usually knowing who we are not, as opposed to knowing exactly who we are.
We develop our identity by process of elimination. We should get rid of the excesses in our lives that keep us from being more of ourselves. When we decrease the options that don’t feed us, we eventually have more options in front of us that do.
Knowing who you are is hard! Eliminate who you are not first!
Boundaries to Freedom
We need borders, gravity, and resistance to have order. This order creates responsibility. The responsibility creates judgment. The judgment creates choice. In the choice lies the freedom.
Later in life, he realized that the suffering and loneliness he experienced (as a foreign exchange student in Australia) was one of the most important sacrifices of his life.
Before the trip to Australia he was never introspective. The trip forced him to look inside himself for the first time.
We cannot fully appreciate the light without the shadows.
It’s better to jump than to fall.
The future is the monster. We should lift our heads, look it in the eye, and watch it heed.
You have to know who you are before you know what you want to say. Knowing who you are is the base that everything else comes from. You know who you are when you become independent enough to believe your own thoughts, and become responsible for your actions, believe what you want, and live what you believe. Live what you believe!
Part Three: Dirt Roads and Autobahns: July 1989
When you know what you want to do, knowing when to do it is the hard part.
Matthew decided to leave law school because he didn’t want to miss his twenties preparing for the rest of his life.
In his dorm room he found a copy of The Greatest Salesman in the World by Augustine “Og” Mandino. He picked it up and read for two and a half hours straight until he got to the first scroll of the book. Shortly after that he decided to switch from law school to film school.
DNA and work, genetics and willpower, life is a combination of the two. You need to both utilize your genes and have an incredible work ethic.
We earn belief in ourselves first, then with others.
Travel and humanity have been his greatest educators.
We are not here to tolerate our differences, we are here to accept them. We are not here to celebrate our sameness. As individuals we unite in our values.
Less impressed. More Involved.
The sooner we become less impressed with ourselves and everything in our lives, the sooner we get more involved and get better. We must be more than happy to just be here.
If you are not a starter and you think you should be, give them no choice, play so well that it’s undeniable.
Taking the road less traveled is not necessarily the road with the least traffic. It may be the road that we personally have traveled less. The introvert may need to get out of the house, the extrovert may need to stay home and read a book.
Matthew Mcconaughey Book
Part Four: The Art of Running Downhill: January 1994
The intellect should simplify things, not make them more cerebral.
We have to prepare in order to have freedom. We have to do the work to then do the job. We have to prepare for the job so we can be free to do the work.
We must learn the consequence of negligence. What we don’t do can be as important as what we do.
We often don’t get what we want because we quit early or we didn’t take the necessary risk to get it. The more boots we put into the back side of our “if only” dreams the more we will get what we want.
Made for the moment. We are all made for every moment we encounter. Whether the moment makes us, or we make the moment. Whether we are helpless in it, or on top of it. We are made for that moment!
Don’t create ceilings over yourself.
Don’t create imaginary constraints! A leading role, a blue ribbon, a winning score, the love of our life, euphoric bliss, a winning score, a great idea. Who are we to think we are not worthy of these when they are within our grasp?
We get too focused on the outcome and we miss the doing of the deed. If we stay in process and within the joy of the doing, we will never choke at the finish line. Why? Because we aren’t thinking of the finish line, we are performing in real-time where the approach is the destination. There is no goal line because we are never finished.
Have immortal finish lines. A roof is a man-made thing.
We all need a walkabout. We need to get alone. Put ourselves in places of decreased sensory input. We can hear ourselves again. Time alone simplifies the heart. Matthew McConaughey took a walkabout to the Monastery of Christ in the Desert.
We don’t always need advice, sometimes we just need to hear that we are not the only one.
Prescription/Prayer
God, when I cross the truth…
- Give me the awareness to receive it
- The consciousness to recognize it
- The presence to personalize it
- The patience to preserve it
- The courage to live it
Part Five: Turn the Page: October 23, 1999
Sometimes which choice you make is not as important as making a choice and committing to it.
Some people look for an excuse to do, others look for an excuse not to.
It is not about whether you win or lose, it’s about accepting the challenge. When you accept the challenge you have already won. This was said after he accepted a wrestling challenge from the champion of a village in Africa.
Greenlights Matthew Mcconaughey Mobi
Great leaders are not always in front, they also know who to follow.
We are going to make mistakes, own them, make amends, and move on!
Part Six: The Arrow Doesn’t Seek the Target, the Target Draws the Arrow: March 2005
We must be aware of what we attract in life, because it is no accident or coincidence.
We must chase what we want, but sometimes we don’t need to make things happen. Our souls are infinitely magnetic.
In 2005 he had five major responsiblities:
- Family
- Foundation
- Acting
- Production Company
- Music label
He felt like he was getting a “B” grade in all five. He decided to eliminate the last two and focus on making an “A” in family, his foundation, and acting.
The genius can do anything, but does one thing at a time.
Three things that will give you clarity, remind you of your mortality, and give you courage to live harder, stronger and truer.
- Death (the end of a life)
- Family Crisis (trying to keep a life)
- Newborn (welcoming a new life)
Part Seven: Be Brave, Take the Hill: Fall 2008
Here is a good plan when facing any crisis:
- Recognize the problem
- Stabilize the situation
- Organize the response
- Respond
Life is not a popularity contest, be brave, take the hill. What is your hill?
Time and truth, two constants you can rely on. One shows up for the first time, every time, while the other never leaves.
Part Eight: Live Your Legacy Now: November 7, 2011
Matthew’s life by decades:
- In his first twenty years he learned the value of values: respect, accountability, creativity, courage, perseverance, fairness, service, good humor, and a spirit of adventure.
- His twenties and thirties were contradictory decades, years when he eliminated conditions and truths that went against his grain.
- His forties were an affirming decade where he started to play offense with truths he had learned and put them into action. An era where he doubled-down on what fed him.
He hopes to give his children an opportunity to find what they love to do, work to be great at it, pursue it, and do it.
P.S.: 10 Goals in Life
He wrote these goals on 09/01/1992 in his journal and found them while writing this book. This was two days after finishing his first acting role in dazed and confused.
Greenlights Matthew Mcconaughey Quotes
- Become a father
- Find and keep the woman for me
- Keep my relationship with God
- Chase my best self
- Be an egotistical utilitarian
- Take more risks
- Stay close to mom and family
- Win an Oscar for best actor
- Look back and enjoy the view
- Just keep living
Related Book Summaries
Hope you enjoyed this and got value from my notes.
This is the 55th book read in my 2020 reading list.
Here is a list of my book summaries.