Wednesday, August 4, 2010

hello, again.

It's been awhile since I've posted in this blog. The end of my senior year of college made normal things in my life hectic. My boyfriend living two states away from me makes things hectic. The "normal things" in my life are hectic.

Dancers have this uncanny ability to change emotions in rapid-fire succession. Angry. Concerned. Mournful.  Playful. Confused. Relaxed. Pensive.

When "dance" is entered, a popular image search engine produces rhinestones. A ponche in little-to-no clothing. Hair wrapped in buns. Stagelights. Mirrors.

A "visual" art is easily defined by photos. Dance, though, is not a "visual" art. It engages your senses, five and otherwise' on a scale that ranges from "very gently, causes you to slightly tilt chin to left side and show a small smile" to "very much forward on edge of seat, mouth agape, knuckles (of hands and feet, mind you) white with tension, chest working fiercely to contain the violent beating that is your own heart."  This art is not simply visual. It is heard, seen, felt, breathed, swallowed, sweat, eaten, slept and nurtured.


____________________________________________________


I've always liked writing. Writing about dance has always felt like trying to walk, right after your legs fall asleep, before they're fully ready. It's a struggle that can sometimes be funny, but is usually frustrating and many time painful. It's like trying to talk on the phone to a loved one when you're conscious is see-sawing between dimness and darkness.
"I love you" 
"I....love you................too." 
"Goodnight" 
".....................................goodnight"

It's still there, though. The need to write about this "art," (how can my life be contained in three letters? Three small letters. I suppose I don't argue with 'love,' which is only four). I feel, as a person, as a "dancer" that loves to write, I should attempt to open a window into the Dance World for the lucky sane people that haven't had an opportunity to get a closer look. A small window, as I'm sure my words aren't profound or eloquent enough to portray the oxymoron ridden universe that is the Dance World. I also feel I should write because I have a hard time with conversations. I yell and cry often. I lose my points in arguments about grammar and I muddle my thought process with tangents and confusion. Paper and pencils (with thick erasers) are forgiving and accepting. Spell check is comforting. As an organizing fiend, copy/paste is my one true love.
I know about the memoirs of past and present dancers. I've seen the self-help books-on-tapes about eating disorders. I've found the psychologists opinionated articles on athletes. I read the Horton books written by Ms. Forsythe.

This will not be like those books.




-----*-----
I need your help, as always, in my process. I need you to tell me about dance. I need stories, memories, thoughts and pictures. I need your definition of dance. I need your take, even if this is the first time you've seen the word, on 'DANCE.' It may be that you don't like the order of vowels and consonants in the spelling, or that you don't think this is a worthwhile project. I need you to tell me. Leave a comment here, or send me an email: alivia_cram@yahoo.com
-----*-----

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Problem.

I have a problem. Seriously.
I drink a Sugar-Free Amp almost every single day before Ballet.
Do you know what is in that crap?!
CRAP! It's all fake, 14 letter-long words that sound more intimidating than the clicking language they spoke in my village in Namibia.
However, since I started drinking this heart-attack-at-25-years-old-in-a-can, I've been able to focus so much more & actually do petite allegro. Except when Jill's watching. Never when she's watching.
I don't think it's just in my head, since there's millions of milligrams of caffeine in one serving (half a can).
I don't know what to do about it. I suppose I should have the will power to just stop. Now it seems like I have a drug problem. Are they really that bad? I refuse to use Styrofoam ever ever ever because it's bad for the environment, but I don't mind drinking things that could melt said Styrofoam to ash. Gross.

This was a semi-worthless entry, since I have no solution or explanation for my ridiculous problem. Maybe someone has created EDAA. Energy Drinker Addicts Anonymous. I'd like to find out.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Mind over Matter. MindOverMatter. Mind over...crap I forgot the combination.

I wanted to write this a long time ago, but I wrote it down and then forgot!

As pessimistic and childish/dramatic as it sounds, I don't think I could ever dance to my full potential if I seriously disliked my instructor's teaching style. I can't focus on anything else except what I want or don't want them to do. I know it isn't my choice and that I have to do whatever they tell me, even if they said to stand on my head, but I have a serious over-thinking or distraction problem.

Maybe I was having a bad day, but I have trouble focusing when we have subs in ballet. Usually, if something is bothering me (i.e. an injury), I can focus on what I'm supposed to be doing and worry about the minor pain later. When I'm distracted, the pain seems to get worse and I get so angry/sad/frustrated/numerous other negative adjectives, I feel like crying. That needs to stop. That crying thing.

It's embarrassing.
And counter-productive.
And messy unless you're wearing water-proof mascara.
And distracting.
And embarrassing.


And it needs to stop.

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Newsflash:

Today I had fun in ballet.

I said this, out loud, and looked around for the person from whose mouth it must've come. There was no one there-- it was me! I said I had fun in ballet!

I should explain my insanity a bit. I usually enjoy myself. I love learning and I love learning how to do things better. I love to be challenged and finally comprehend how to overcome the challenge. However, the comprehending part doesn't happen often. Usually I feel like the challenge is a car, and I'm supposed to be the passenger. Usually, the car either drags me behind it or runs right over me. Then we're asked to do petite allegro again (!) and the car backs up and runs over me. Again. Then I must get up and do grand allegro.

Reason # 452 Why Alivia Cannot Leap/Ever Do Grand Allegro:
She's recovering from being run over by a Range Rover, twice. No big deal.

Could I be more dramatic? Possibly. I know it doesn't seem like it, but this is what goes through my head in ballet class.

BUT TODAY WAS DIFFERENT! Today I felt like Jill speaks: "You should be so excited to do rond de jambe! You love it!"

I did! I DO!

I just kept repeating all of the corrections I could remember while doing the exercises. Hipforward, thigh back. Shoulders relaxed. Tight knees. Push the thigh. After each one worked, I felt like saying "DUH." Outloud. That's how I feel after a "complicated" combination suddenly makes sense. After petite allegro, I thought "Oh, we have time, I hope she says to do it again so I can work on it another time; I think I've got it!"

As long as Jill doesn't look at me. Then it's all over. If anyone anywhere has any suggestions for this, I'd love to hear them. Nothing I do works! Pretend you're onstage. Everyone is looking at you. Nope. Pretend she's doing something else! Nope. When I think "Oh, show her you can do it!" I get performance anxiety and get so nervous I forget the combination, and if you asked me, probably my name.

What the heck?

I think I need to remember that I have a  "Happy Place" when I get nervous, or when I'm wiggling, wobbling or unstable in general. My happy place is when I pretend that a group of little kids come into class (or where ever I am) to watch me dance. Usually I think about the kids that were in my Creative Movement class, or the babies I met in Namibia. They're so awed by dancing, all I want to do is dance for them and make them happy. That's my happy place. It relaxes me to the point where I don't wiggle or fall or forget to breathe- things just work.

So anyway. Today, ballet was fun. I did have lots of caffeine before class, so that probably helped a lot. That's not good, but it's the only variable I can think of that was changed.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Constant Flow of Not Focusing.

I used to have a constant flow of thoughts, questions and arguments, in my head during ballet and directly after class, or watching a performance.

I now have this new, weird rationalization that stops these thoughts...but focus has not taken it's place. I think about how ballet is the opposite of natural. "If you're comfortable, it's wrong." Then I think "Yes, but it's making me stronger and it's only an hour and a half and it makes me better at modern, which I love. I'll put myself through torture for modern." I call this rationalizing, but this may be the brainwashing I've mentioned. Maybe I'm brainwashed. If I'm brainwashed into thinking the things we do in ballet, as well as the mindset and words used in the teaching of ballet, I'd be more focused and happy in ballet. I'm not.

 My body hurts everywhere there's a joint...so, everywhere. It hurts everywhere. Awesome, this really makes me want to go to class, in pain, while getting yelled at that my leg isn't high enough or my weight isn't distributed correctly. What I'm thinking now that all of my existential crises are being semi-explained or, at least, ignored, is "Did I eat two ice cream cones or one today? I wonder if Nikki is getting me a tea. I love tea. If I didn't eat any ice cream, I can have some later. I wonder how much I weigh now. Did I write down what I had for lunch? Is it pique on 5 hold 6 or 7 close 8? I wonder if anyone is looking at me right now. I hope no one is looking at me. I hope they aren't judging me. The ballet world, as well as college, was created around judgment, however, so I'm guessing they're judging me. Damn. I messed up the combination. Well, one more side and we'll be on adage and I love adage. Okay, focus. Look at the exit sign. Focus. Did someone just open the door?"

I've got to work on that.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Sick in more ways than one.

Today, I was sick. I am shaky all over, ache, have terrible congestion and have been sleep deprived. Today I took some cold medicine this morning and then again before ballet (this is the recommended dosage/frequency, don't worry). I semi-forgot about this fact when I bought an AMP energy drink (sugar free, but still sweeter than any candy I've ever had. How is this possible? Oh, that's right, it's made out of Splendacancer.) I also had a tea. A caffeinated tea.

You do the math, but don't tell me about it because the numbers are scary before I even know what they are. I had too much. There is too much fake stuff running marathons and doing back flips in my bloodstream. A heart attack should be just around the corner.

I'm not sure I've said one positive/healthy thing yet. However, if you are a dancer, you've probably been thinking this the whole time:

The amount of energy and power I had during ballet was amazing. I could jump and lift and turn and balance wonderfully.

I will be the first of us to admit-- this is a little sick. There should be no "Yes, but..." after the line "I'm probably going to have a heart attack." Right.
But...

When you love to dance, you have to accept that the relationship is unbalanced. It's like slaving away for someone-- all day every day-- on your hands and knees, working as hard as you can. You go up to this person at the end of the day and ask "What will you give me in return?" They reply, 
"I will allow you to live."

Oh, fantastic! I get to live! I get to pull my hair out over confusing combinations, give myself tendinitis and bruises, wear tight clothing, sweat, roll around on a dirty floor, leap fearlessly into the air knowing no net is there to catch me, get no sleep and then do all it again the next day!

I'll take it.
We all take it.
I accept these ridiculous things in order to truly make myself happy at the end of the day. And, hopefully, in the future, make others happy as well.  Movement, to ballet dancers, to modern dancers, to humans-- is life. Your heart beats. Your lungs fill. Your eyes open and close. Asking us why we would chose this life is like trying to explain why a kiss or a hug explains our emotions far better than words themselves. We just have to.




(again, I'm on cold medicine. If this makes no sense, I apologize and will realize it sooner or later ;) )

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

I need a Jiminy Cricket!

Ballet Journal #3

I'm pretty sure I would be something like a prima ballerina (yeah right, just kidding) if I had someone constantly whispering praises into my ear while I was dancing. I can't explain it. It's like I can instantly do whatever I need to do whenever someone tells me I can. It's lame! Why can't I be that encouraging person for myself?! That's stupid.

I still hate that bone in the ball of my foot. It grinds on the floor every time I try to balance.


I do know that if I stop psyching myself out before attempting to pirouette, I may actually be able to turn. Every time I think "Oh no, oh no, oh no ohnoohnoohno...I can't do it!" (or something along those lines). That needs to stop.

Sunday, January 31, 2010

Journal #2

Ballet Journal
Week # 2: Jan 25-29

This week was very inconsistent. On Tuesday, I couldn't remember anything and kept messing up the combinations. HOWEVER (this needs its own line. I considered only writing this in this week's journal. It is that groundbreaking.)

* I actually beat the petite allegro. *

I probably messed it up every time someone was watching me, but I totally did it correctly without:
  1. Crying
  2. Swearing
  3. Having to ask 4 people to explain it to me 17 different ways
It was a miracle. A MIRACLE. I had so much more to write about, about consistency and arabesques and effort....but now all of that seems so insignificant.

I still can't believe it! It gives me so much more confidence! I do have something else important to say, though. I have begun to attempt to really listen to the music more and actually dance instead of just being on the correct counts-- this gives me confidence as well.

Confidence (coupled with really, really encouraging yourself) does so much more than I ever thought it could.

Saturday, January 30, 2010

Kitre Variation


Yesterday, we learned this variation from Don Q.
Today I woke up, wondering why my feet were killing me.
Oh, now I remember.

Sunday, January 24, 2010

Ballet Journal #1

This will probably not be included in the book, since it's ridiculously boring for everyone except myself and Jill, my ballet professor for whom it is written. Skip it if you wish.

Week #1: January  26th-29th
This week was rough for me, and I don't think it was just because it was the first week back from break. I think I need to work on my body awareness-- if I knew that my arms were in the right place without having to focus so much about keeping them there, I might be able to relax my shoulders. I can't relax my shoulders. In order to relax my shoulders, I either have to drop my chest, (which is wrong) or drop my elbows, which is also wrong. It probably doesn't help that my back hurts constantly; Meg said it was from stress...but I'm stressed because my back hurts and I can't move the way I want!
I also think I would balance better if the bone in the ball of my foot below my big toe didn't grind on the floor so much. This is something that had only just started to happen recently, but it's beginning to hurt increasingly, even when I haven't been dancing on it all day. I know my supporting side has always been the main thing that throws me off when balancing-- I would say the misalignment from my ribs to my hips is a factor, but if I fix my supporting side, this would be fixed as well.
I have no excuse for why my petite allegro is so terrible, always. It's always terrible. Maybe it's from being exhausted, but everyone else in the class is equally exhausted  and they pull it together. I know the fact that  none of my teachers ever did a petite allegro in class doesn't help, which is unbelievable to me now.
Pirouettes, too. How come I can't do those anymore? I used to be able to do at least a clean double on both sides, which isn't in the least bit impressive, but now I struggle constantly. Thinking back on it, I probably wasn't doing them correctly, but I'm still discouraged.

Friday, January 22, 2010

The beginning.

Sometimes I have profound ideas that almost put two shaved legs in jeopardy of ever existing. The shower is my thinking place, if you couldn't get through the mess of wordiness in the previous sentence.

My thinking place, where I slowly get to have a few minutes to myself, to wash out the hairsprayed mess that my bun has become, to rinse off the layers of dried sweat and/or blood that has taken residence on my bruised, tired  body. To think about what the day had held, to rid my mind of the repeating corrections, to organize and add to my never, ever-ending 'To-Do' list. To break up the concrete my career of choice has poured into my neck and shoulders.
My boyfriend wonders why I take so long to get ready for bed at night.

Today, while in the middle of all of that previously mentioned, I had an idea that made me want to jump out right then and begin to assemble it. I didn't, though. I shaved the other leg and rinsed the conditioner. Don't worry, I'm not writing this while dripping on the computer. My idea, the idea that seems far less-glamorous and simply straightforward now, was to write a book.

It needs to be done.

It needs to be done for these reasons:
  1. I cannot continue to bother my dear best friend, Nicole, with daily dance frustrations and open-ended, unanswerable questions. My fear of losing her is too great and, understandably, she would leave if I continue to dance and speak about it. (Editor's Note: That last part is not true. She'd never do such a thing because of how sweet she is. Reason number one on why you and everyone else in the universe should love this woman.)
  2. My brain needs a space to store the questions and musings it conceptualizes in the middle of barre work. No notebook's binding is strong enough to hold these headache-causing, worried, grammatically incorrect existential crises I muster up during waltz.
  3. The mirror exists. Dancers will know what this statement of truth entails. Sadly, the rest of you will understand soon enough.
  4. The little ones, the eight-year-olds, need to be taught to hold on to their innocent love of dance. The inexplicable, I-don't-care-what-I-look-like-I-just-want-to-move-around feeling. I should say that this love should not be UN-taught by teachers and professionals that have misguided priorities. This is not always their fault, but more about this later.
  5. Sadly, I don't see my love of writing ever being fully encompassed into my love of expressive movement. If these two interests were people, this book would be the marriage of two dorky, poorly-spoken, shy, argyle-wearing drama geeks. {If I get any crap about putting down theatre people, I will defend my love of it (and all of the beautiful elements it holds) to the grave. However, there will never be any strong, winning argument of how drama dorks should not be called anything but that. Move on.}
First of all, I like lists. This book will contain many of them. I find them easy to read, and, if I ever come into any talent and this book becomes a required text for a class, students everywhere will thank me when they realize the 100 pages they were assigned to read are really only 40 pages of writing with 60 pages worth of diagrams, lists and doodles. You're welcome, future lazy readers.

Secondly, (See? A list already--disguised as "writing") I respect any teacher that has ever had the guts to get up in front of a room full of scrutinizing, inherently-critical people-- dancers. Although I may not agree with your teaching "techniques," you've nonetheless taught me something, otherwise this blog/book would've been washed down the drain with my shampoo. Maybe this collection of thoughts will help you (I say this extremely tentatively) with future teaching. Maybe you were not aware that you not only taught me how to wear my bun, you taught me how to hold back tears in class. Maybe you'll correct more and critique less. Or, maybe you don't care that I felt like I was slapped with your words almost everyday-- that's fine, too. I'll get over it and the positive things you've brainwashed into our heads does creates a sort of balance. A sort of sick, twisted balance...but I'm getting off topic.

Thirdly, I will get off topic. The intent of this post was to be a description of my first pointe class of the semester...have I talked about pointe at all? Do you even know who I am? No. Sorry, any visitors I somehow kept reading this long. I appreciate your efforts. With that said, I must organize a bit better before continuing on this path less-traveled I've made for myself. And my pointe shoes need to be jet-setted.

In conclusion:
Things this book will cover:
  • Things dance teachers say and how they say them
  • The mirror paradox
  •  What makes "a dancer"
  • The "dance world"
  • The social life (or lack thereof) of dancers
  • The thoughts that throw me off balance while dancing 
This list does not make my future book sound interesting. I don't even think I would read it, if the above was  on the back cover.

Don't worry. It'll get better, just stick with me through my introductory phase.

*tap, tap* Is this thing on?