Monthly Archives: March 2013

back on the island

This is my grand daughter Laila’s first boat ride.  Her Mom Bimala, her auntie Chandrika and I are on the ferry from Wood’s Hole to Martha’s Vineyard. We are going to visit their godparents, Jo-Ann and Derrill, and I will be working with their autistic son, Jacob.

This is my daughter Chandrika playing with Jacob on Thursday morning.  Jacob is a climber, and can find the most elaborate and winding ways of descending.  My goal this week is to wake up some of the development patterns that are not fully present in Jacob, and to play with him, enjoy him, love him.  With touch, with movement, with stillness, with sound.  Jacob has my heart, and being with him is a great gift.

To top it all off, I get to be on my favorite place on earth with the funnest person I know, my daughter Chandrika, her sister Bimala, and all of this tenderness.  Lucky me!

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tested

http://sangbleu.com/2009/12/14/painted-knees-of-a-moulin-rouge-dancer/

Sometime during the rehearsal I felt it happen.  I did a sudden snapping movement with my leg and my knee hyperextended.  I stopped and looked at it.  “That’s not good,” I thought.  It didn’t hurt, so I kept going.

It wasnt good.  I ripped both the lateral and medial meniscus and popped a big cyst out the back of the joint capsule.  My knee doesn’t bend. I can’t climb stairs.  One of my dancers watched the performance of my solo and said she wished I had included some movement on the floor.  I said that I would do that as soon as I could bend my knee.

My osteopath looked at me yesterday and said, “You are being tested.”  What is being tested?  My patience, my endurance, my resourcefulness, my tolerance.  And more.

In my studio, I tried doing some of the movement.  I noticed that I initiate much of my movement with quickness, which at the moment is unsafe for my poor knee.  Quickness is my “lane,” my “wheelhouse” in the language of American idol.  It is how I get my body places that it otherwise doesn’t know how to go.

The point of all this is that I have to find some new ways of moving while I am healing.  Linda Tellington-Jones always says “isn’t that interesting” when she encounters something problematic in a horse she is working with.  I am looking for that attitude – curiosity instead of frustration, willingness instead of fear.  Learning to try new things, looking for other ways of seeing and doing.  Being improvisational. Not waiting for the end point, but being in the journey, one step at a time.

In the meantime:

http://www.sonotaprincess.com.au/journal/2011/3/26/put-to-the-blush.html

body of work

 

Body of Work: Dances with Horses from Paula Josa-Jones on Vimeo.

I put this up on Facebook and have been thrilled with the number of people who are generously sharing it there.  I am still so passionate about this work, and look forward to more.  Please enjoy and pass it on!