Matthew McConaughey said he had “many doubts” when he was starting out as an actor in an interview that aired last week.
He said there were times he was sure something was going to work out and “either I imploded or the world exploded it for me,” he laughed, noting that frequently his successes also came as surprises.
“I’ve also had many times where I just – the hardest part about me going into what I was going to do is just to tie my shoes get out the damn door, jump off the cliff and figure out how to fly on the way down,” he said.
The Texan mused it “seems like that’s sort of the art of life – making plans and then knowing change is going to come anyway.”
McConaughey spoke about the beginnings of his career as the first guest on sports journalist Rich Eisen’s new podcast, ”Just Getting Started With Rich Eisen.”
Eisen said he plans to interview stars from all walks of life on how they made their first strides toward success.
McConaughey, the “Dallas Buyers Club” actor, said people often want to know what their efforts will get them before they try but he noted that success in anything is never how it’s imagined.
Rewards “aren’t what we thought they were when we get there anyway,” he told Eisen.
He said he thinks doubts can be assuaged by “lean[ing] into the comfort of doubting” and just focusing on the process and not the result.
The actor explained he had never planned on being an actor. He had always thought he would end up practicing law — “That’s all I talked about” — but he had a change of heart in college. His father, he said, was supportive of his decision to become an actor but told him not to “half a–” it.
He pointed out the importance of “committing” to whatever you want to do and in the pursuit of his career, he said that sometimes he’s landed a job just because he failed so many times the person hiring appreciated his tenacity.
“I have gotten some jobs by failing more often and consistently,” he laughed.
McConaughey, who calls himself an “aggressive centrist” and has been rumored to be considering a run for Texas governor, spoke out in December against extremism on either side, bashing what he called the “illiberal” left.
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“You need liberals. What I don’t think we need is the illiberals,” he said on “Good Morning Britain.” “And what I don’t think that some liberals see is that they’re often being cannibalized by the illiberals. Now there are extremes on both sides that I think are unfair, that I don’t think are the right place to be. The extreme left and the extreme right completely illegitimize the other side, the liberal and conservative side, which we need in certain places. The two extremes illgeitimze those two sides.”