I first joined the Brazilian Communist Party (PCB) in 2018, right after Bolsonaro’s election. I had been following members of the Communist Youth League (UJC) for a few years by then, but seeing Bolsonaro win made me realise I shouldn’t be waiting until I felt I was knowledgeable enough on Marxism-Leninist theory to join an organization. When PCB split in 2023, I left to join the newly formed Revolutionary Brazilian Communist Party. We’ve been doing a lot of good work, but I turned 30 last year and it made me thing a lot. I’m a Film graduate and I went to college because I wanted to be a screenwriter. The career path I expected before joining simply wasn’t realistic: it’s quite hard to get paid to write, you need to do a lot of writing in your free time and then try to sell it or get a public grant to build up your portfolio. And the time and energy I devoted to the party simply didn’t allow me enough free time to write as many projects per year as I need to if I want to make in this area. I graduated 10 years ago and, since then, I have made nothing. I started seeing the names of people I studied with in the credits of movies and TV shows and it made me feel like I’m behind. I’m not feeling great about quitting. There’s nothing wrong with taking a couple years to focus on yourself, but stepping away from something I dedicated myself to for long and in which I still strongly believe isn’t a trivial decision. It makes me feel selfish. I’m hoping I’ll be in a place where I can come back to militant work in two years or so.

  • darkcalling@lemmygrad.ml
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    12 hours ago

    You need to take care of yourself and survive too and thrive as well. And if I’m being honest given your career desires to screen-write I think another even closeted Marxist screenwriter is a lot more valuable for the movement than another part-time, distracted, under-employed, and sad cadre. So go for it and don’t feel bad.