Saturday, February 24, 2007
A not quite ballet story
When I was 6 years old their was this other little girl in my grade one class that always wore this pretty and shiny blue dress to school and twirled around like a ballerina. She was in ballet classes and I thought she was so graceful. Dance envy at age 6. So I asked my mom if I could have ballet lessons and I made it clear how badly I wanted them. So my mom looked into ballet classes for me. I remember seeing information sheets on ballet classes in the kitchen. However a few weeks later my mom told me that she really couldn't afford to enroll me in classes and that she was really sorry. I was disappointed and I always remember wishing that we could have afforded ballet classes, because I loved dance, even line dancing and square dancing that we learned in school. In fact in grade five when i was living with my dad I used to go square dancing with one of my friends and her mom. we were the only two little girls there but we always had so much fun.
I learned quite a lot later, maybe when I was 18 or so that the reason that I couldn't get into those ballet classes oh so long ago was that when my mom had approached the instructor about enrolling me in her classes and explained that I had Spina Bifida, and that I sometimes had a slight limp and a few minor issues with muscle control in my right foot but I was an incredibly energetic kid. The instructor told her that she was afraid I would hold up her other students and that she didn't want to adapt her program for a disabled child. I realize now that my mom had probably heard that speech so many times when I was little, and she protected me from knowing that the reasons I wasn't getting into programs I wanted was because teachers were afraid of dealing with my disability. I grew up not even realizing I had a disability for the most part....I was very much aware that we were poor, but besides some very minor differences and quite a lot of school yard bullying which I mostly ignored, I never felt disabled. So while I do regret not being trained in dance (something I am now learning you are never too old for!) I am learning to admire my mothers courage in dealing with peoples prejudices against something they couldn't understand, and how by protecting me from that world as much as she could I never learned the meaning of 'give up' or 'quit" or "you will never be able to be like everyone else, smart, successful etc". In fact I still believe I can do anything I want to do as long as I want it badly enough and I work hard enough and I learn how to adapt my approach to it to match my abilities.
Tuesday, February 06, 2007
In Loving Memory
A Portrait of a Good Man
He was a good man, a great man, and he was my Grampa.
An old man with a cane, a cute smile and a funny laugh
He used to build boats, staring out into the wild Pacific
He built a small boat, a puddle jumper.
He built a small house, and a small family
He was a good father. And good husband. And a good man.
His children weren’t always good. And life wasn’t always easy.
And many of his stories went untold or heard only by the salty chilly sea
He was a humble man, a generous man, a simple and quiet man.
Was he a complex man? A thoughtful man? A philosopher?
Who was he underneath that funny laugh, and sly wink?
As he ate his grapefruit each morning what was he thinking?
Was there thought’s that could challenge the most educated scholar?
Or was he simply content to be an honest hardworking man?
A man who worked by the sea, did the ocean ever call out to him?
Did he imagine great wild adventures never realized?
I know he traveled the world by cruise ship,
And traversed the country in a camper van
Could he be defined as a traveling man?
Or was he just content to have a small home, and small family to call his own?
My Grampa, who weaved a thousands things, and kept a thousand pictures.
Came from a big family and loved his small family
Each memory firmly framed by wood and glass
Hung carefully upon the wall, with space and places for each new face, new memory
Do the pictures tell his story or was there something else hidden underneath
Are there words he never spoke that can’t be read in static preserved memories?
A thousand unanswered questions to match a thousand precious memories
Memories of a good man, a great man, my Grampa
A good man now a static memory framed by wood and glass
Sitting on my desk to remind me of a man greatly loved by many
And greatly loved by me, in a way that words and actions cannot describe
Except for what can be read from a picture or a Portrait of a Good Man.
Dance Dance!
So instead of writing more I am just going to post a few links for you to browse that show our progression from rehearsal to tech rehearsal to final performance. Keep in mind that it was just a digital camera who taped these so they aren't the best quality, but they do give you an idea of what the dance looked like.
In the Studio:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
Tech Rehearsal:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
Final Performance:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
enjoy!