To
organize my thoughts. To manage my time. To consider how I might be perceived.
To be disciplined in my practice. But it also takes more time than I can
afford, especially this week.
On the point of writing, many years ago, I decided to create
and write a short story as a gift for a friend. I had given myself a deadline
to pass on the finished product as a Christmas gift, which meant I had about
three months. I dedicated a minimum of an hour every day to writing, and once
the writing was done, I moved on to editing, and then I moved on to
illustrating, and then I moved on to crafting a one-of-a-kind-gift bound into a
single book. In the end, the process ended up taking me almost eighteen months,
the final product was gifted as a birthday present two years later than I had
intended.
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I'm not sure what purpose this serves... but it has always caught my eye, and one day I found myself standing next to it. |
For the past two days I have been completing the final
reports for my Fulbright-Nehru Fellowship that are due prior to the end of my
grant period on Saturday to come. While most of the reportage is more like
statistical data, there have been a few moments where it was tempting to try
and make some adjustments to the standardized questions and multiple choice
answers. But I opted to try and fit myself into the formatted profiles as best I
could. For example, if you ever met me in person, you would know that I don’t
identify as “Chinese”, but as “Jamaican”, and now I am also a naturalized
immigrant in the USA. One series of questions asks about whether we consider
ourselves as a “racial or ethnic minority” in our “home” country and/or our “host”
country. But it does not provide an option to potentially only consider being
EITHER racially or ethnically in the minority. I consider myself to be racially
Chinese, but ethnically Jamaican (I will leave it up to you to Google the
definitions of each) as both my parents and my subsequent generation in our
family was born and grew up in Jamaica. So at least I am not bending the
reality too greatly when I answer that I am a minority in both instances.
Going back to producing the “gift” described
earlier, I learned a valuable lesson about the discipline and skill it takes to
write, which would repeatedly come into play as the years have passed, like
when I pursued my MFA in Dance and spent a couple of years “chained” to a word
processing program. What I had not realized at the time was that with writing I
had been replicating a discipline of dance practice that was simply a part of
my daily life. Starting from I was about eleven years old until I had my first
major injury nine years later, I had never gone more than a week without taking
a dance class of some sort. The doctor’s directive to not be physically active
for six weeks almost drove me crazy, and I returned to finding a daily practice
in dance or movement, whenever possible, pretty much until I stopped
performing.
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1992 on San Francisco
Bay. Though I like this shot, it is not intended to encourage anyone to paddle
outdoors without wearing a lifejacket. Mine can just be seen readily available
on the back deck of my kayak, and I was paddling with a fellow professional
guide to get photos of some of the locations to which we took groups.
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A subsequent injury with an extended recovery and
rehabilitation time-frame led me to seek lower impact activities. I was living
in the San Francisco Bay Area and thanks to a close friend, I discovered
kayaking and life in the outdoors. I always joke that I spent 200 days on the
water in my first year of kayaking. I have no idea how much time I actually
spent getting out on San Francisco Bay and into pools (mostly with a kayak),
but I did it every chance I could create. Here once again, I discovered the
great benefit of balance. I was jumping between my life in the controlled
architectural environs of studios and theaters into a contra-distinctive life in
the outdoors playing on a liquid surface and subject to the whims of weather.
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Showing short retrospective on Paul Taylor and his work to a workshop class at Future School of Performing Arts in Mumbai. |
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Working with a student in Goa. |
As I enter the final week of my time in India, I have been
reflecting on what I might be leaving behind when I leave. Mostly I have felt like
my personal histories with migrancy, injury and recovery, cultural and
professional adaptation, have all guided my responses to life and work here. It
is could be easy to imagine that when people here ask me for advice that I
actually have the “right” answer. But the truth is that I can mostly just offer
a perspective born of my own experience with similar situations. There is so
much that I don’t know, and at the same time, I recognize how much more I have
had the privilege to encounter in the decades of my life as a dancer in the USA
and Europe, and not just in the Arts, but in business, managing sports
injuries, pedagogical approaches to movement, and a certain liberalism from
living where a nonreligious lifestyle is more commonly practiced.
It has been humbling that dancers, teachers and others have found
what I have to offer in my teaching and perspectives to be catalytic to their
thinking, and to have had enough time to see the effects of my presence. At the
same time, I am constantly listening to myself speaking and wondering, “How did
I come to have the confidence and compassion that I seem to be expressing?”
On occasion, I will still take a dance class as a student,
but I don’t think I have done so without an ulterior motive, for years.
Certainly, once I received the Fulbright grant I started to observe and take
from other teachers with a decided curiosity around what I thought was
effective about a teacher’s approach and content. When I have had the energy, I
have ventured to take a few of the ballet classes offered here in India, and I
still find a certain child-like joy in moving and finding the embodied
knowledge from decades past. More than that, however, I found myself wanting so
much for the dancers around me to find the freedom in their own dancing that I
so often used to escape reality for even the most fleeting of moments, where I could
fly or balance on the point of a pin.
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Master class in Delhi at NarenJayen. |
I have asked my own dance students, “Why do you take class?”
When I was a kid, class was dance. As
a pre-professional, class was a safe environment to discover and build new
skills to take into rehearsals and performance. As a working dancer, I would
focus on how I approached class to
match the rehearsals or performances I would be doing later in the day. As a
teacher and coach, taking class I try
to empathize with the difficulties I see students struggling to master based on
what I find easier or harder to accomplish myself and I am much more cognizant
of what I imagine the teacher is looking for.
As a side note, beyond the physical limitations that comes
with age, I find that I have needed to be more forgiving of myself for NOT
picking up dance phrases/sequences as quickly as I once did. Speed to pick-up,
and consistent reproduction of, movement sequences is definitely more
challenging for me in recent years. “If you don’t use it, you’ll lose it”
comes to mind as an apropos adage. I used to pride myself in picking up
exercises and choreography quickly, and the reality is that it was a skill I
honed with constant use that is no longer true of my daily life.
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Ballet master class at The School of Classical Ballet and Western Dance. |
Admittedly, I have let the discipline of some
kind of physical activity every day slide egregiously in the last ten years,
and I begrudgingly tell my doctors that my preparation and teaching of dance
classes is the primary extent of what I would consider regular exercise.
Fortunately I maintain a fairly healthy schedule that ranges from twice a week
to every day when I am staging works or on faculty for intensives. This post
started about the challenges of the discipline of writing as a hobby, and I may
not be much faster at writing these entries, however, at the end of these past six months I
have regained some of the fluency in my teaching and dancing that could only
have come from the constancy of a mostly daily practice.
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Sumeet and Sasha Nagdev hosted a loving "farewell" dinner for me with the dancers whom I have been teaching at their studios. Somehow my hosts avoided being in the picture! |
Thanks for sharing. i really like the Gallery mural, but then I'm a sucker for cartoons or caricature...
ReplyDeleteIt's great that you are getting ideas from this post as well as from our
ReplyDeletediscussion made at this place.
Dear Anonymous, I am curious about who you are, and if our "discussion" was in person? Cheers, Richard.
Delete