For over five years, I worked in the film industry.
I didn’t enter as a producer.
I didn’t enter with a big title.
I started as an Administrative Assistant in a film production company. Quietly observing. Learning. Asking questions.
Curiosity became growth.
Growth became responsibility.
Responsibility became leadership.
And then one project changed everything.
This is my true story of ambition, pressure, toxic production culture, spiritual conflict, and why I ultimately walked away from an industry I once dreamed of conquering.
From Admin Assistant to Producing a 100-Episode Series
When I first joined the company, I handled schedules, documents, coordination, and logistics. I was behind the scenes — the silent engine that keeps operations running.
But I wanted more.
I studied how producers operated.
I stayed curious.
I volunteered for responsibility.
Eventually, I was given an opportunity — one that felt like both promotion and trial by fire.
My first major project: a 100-episode television series.
Yes, one hundred episodes.
There was no gradual onboarding. No gentle transition. I was thrown into the deep end.
I made mistakes.
I learned fast.
I was stretched beyond comfort.
At times, it felt like I had been thrown under the bus. The expectations were high, and I was still growing into the role.
But I survived.
And because I survived, I was contracted for future projects.
That survival built confidence. I believed I was on my way to becoming an Executive Producer someday. My dream was clear: one day own my own production house and create content that glorifies Jesus and reflects my faith.
But growth without boundaries can lead to burnout.
And I didn’t see it coming.
When the Projects Stopped
After several productions, the company entered a difficult season.
Finances went low.
Projects slowed down.
Then stopped.
For over a year, there were no major productions.
In the film industry, silence is dangerous. No projects mean no cash flow. No cash flow means pressure.
When a major international opportunity finally appeared, it felt like a lifeline.
This was a well-known global company.
A large-scale project.
Potentially one of the biggest productions the company had ever handled.
We saw hope.
But we did not see what it would cost.
The Project That Changed My Perspective on Film
On paper, the project looked manageable.
But from the moment we started, it felt different.
As Line Producer, I began reading the scripts. I couldn’t finish them.
The content contained what those in film would call “RED scenes.” If you understand production, you understand that term.
Scenes that push moral boundaries.
Scenes that sit heavy on your conscience.
Scenes that force you to question your convictions.
I started wrestling internally.
Can I execute this project to completion?
Am I compromising my faith for professional growth?
Is this assignment aligned with who I am?
This wasn’t just about production logistics anymore.
It became spiritual warfare within me.
The Reality of Toxic Film Production
The glamour people see on screen hides a brutal truth.
Film production can be:
- Politically intense
- Emotionally exhausting
- Client-driven to unhealthy extremes
- Relentlessly demanding
This project brought challenges none of us anticipated.
There were attempts by the client to taint the company’s reputation, allegedly to avoid granting a Season 2. Pressure came from every direction.
What was meant to restore the company financially became the most draining production we had ever handled.
It didn’t just affect leadership.
It affected everyone.
From the Producer
To the camera crew
To the cleaner on set
The atmosphere shifted from creative collaboration to survival mode.
Burnout in the Film Industry Is Real
This was not ordinary stress.
This was full-spectrum depletion.
Emotionally
Constant crisis management.
Client dissatisfaction.
Team fatigue.
Internal pressure to “deliver at all costs.”
Physically
Long hours.
No boundaries.
Endless calls.
Continuous urgency.
Spiritually (The Most Devastating)
This project slowly pulled me away from:
- Church
- Bible study
- Prayer
- Fellowship
- Family
- Friends
I didn’t notice it at first.
But I was drifting.
The very foundation that shaped my values was being replaced by deadlines and deliverables.
That scared me more than any client pressure ever could.
When Money Stops Being Worth It
We began counting days to wrap.
Not out of excitement — but desperation.
When production finally ended, the entire team breathed a collective sigh of relief.
People said things that revealed the depth of the trauma:
“Even if it comes with triple pay — never again.”
That statement stayed with me.
When professionals begin valuing peace over triple income, something is deeply wrong.
This wasn’t just a difficult project.
It was transformational — in the most painful way.
The Dream That Started It All
Before this project, my ambition was clear.
I wanted to become an Executive Producer.
I wanted to own a production house.
I wanted to create content that speaks life.
Content that reflects faith.
Content that glorifies Jesus.
But during this project, I realized something powerful:
Ambition without alignment leads to compromise.
I had started with passion.
But somewhere along the way, survival replaced purpose.
The Decision to Leave the Film Industry
Two weeks after we wrapped, I resigned.
No dramatic confrontation.
No explosion.
Just clarity.
I didn’t want to continue in an environment that cost me spiritually.
The decision was not impulsive.
It was reflective.
I had to ask myself:
Am I working for pay?
Or am I serving humanity?
That question reframed everything.
Creative Career Burnout: The Silent Crisis
Many creatives are silently struggling.
High-pressure industries reward endurance.
They celebrate hustle.
They glorify long hours.
But few talk about:
- Spiritual exhaustion
- Moral conflict
- Toxic client relationships
- Emotional detachment
- Identity crisis
Film industry burnout isn’t just about being tired.
It’s about losing connection to why you started.
Faith and Filmmaking: A Difficult Balance
I still believe storytelling is powerful.
Film shapes culture.
Film influences generations.
Film can glorify God — or distort values.
But I learned that not every opportunity is meant for you.
Some projects look like elevation but lead to erosion.
If a project demands your peace, your faith, and your identity — it may not be promotion.
It may be a distraction.
Purpose Over Paycheck
There is nothing wrong with earning well.
But when income costs:
- Your spiritual life
- Your family connection
- Your emotional health
- Your integrity
Then you must pause.
Purpose is not just about what you do.
It is about who you become while doing it.
I realized I did not want success at the expense of alignment.
What I Learned From Walking Away
Here are my biggest lessons:
1. Survival Is Not Success
Just because you can endure something doesn’t mean you should.
2. Financial Pressure Can Blur Judgment
When companies experience drought seasons, desperation can cloud discernment.
3. Toxic Environments Drain Everyone
No team member is immune.
4. Your Calling Should Not Compromise Your Faith
If your career pulls you away from God consistently, something must change.
5. Peace Is Priceless
Triple pay cannot restore spiritual depletion.
Are You Working for Pay or to Serve Humanity?
That question changed my life.
If the salary disappeared tomorrow, would you still believe in what you’re building?
If the prestige vanished, would your purpose remain?
We must ask ourselves:
Are we building income…
Or impact?
Are we chasing status…
Or serving humanity?
Final Reflection
Leaving the film industry was not quitting.
It was alignment.
It was choosing peace over pressure.
Faith over fear.
Purpose over paycheck.
I may return to storytelling one day — but on my terms.
With content that aligns with my faith.
With projects that uplift rather than erode.
With intention that serves humanity.
Because at the end of the day, success is not about surviving the storm.
It’s about knowing when to step out of it.

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