Monthly Archives: November 2013

a gift resides in every moment #2

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This post was in the Writer’s Almanac yesterday, and was forwarded to me by my friend Suzanne Weinburg as well.  Reminding me of Deepak Chopra’s centering thought for a few days ago, “A gift resides in every moment.”  Thursday’s  meditation was on intention, and on creating a vision of what you want.  According to Deepak, “Attention energizes, intention transforms.”

In my intention, I am seeing how every word, every thought, every action is a part of that river of intention, and how in the absence of attention, those little words, thoughts and actions can become wasteful, random and careless if I am not aware.  That does not mean that I have to be editing myself every minute, but that I need to feel the resonance of what I am expressing, even inwardly, and how it is rageful, or tragic or just obsessively ruminative, I am losing the forward-thinking, expansive possibilities of my deepest desire.  Profound loss, or devastation of a dream – let’s say the loss of a child – can shatter open the doors and create a necessity for change.

Last night, I was listening to sound effects – car crashes, buildings falling, terrible cracks of thunder and lightening.  I am looking for something for a score I am creating for a new solo.  Listening to them last night, I realized that they mirrored something in m experience (and how!) and that by bringing them fully into consciousness, I was also letting something go, or bringing it out of those obsessive, hidden ruminative places into creative light.  Giving myself permission to move, to keep moving, to dance.

Permission Granted

by David Allen Sullivan

You do not have to choose the bruised peach
or misshapen pepper others pass over.
You don’t have to bury
your grandmother’s keys underneath
her camellia bush as the will states.

You don’t need to write a poem about
your grandfather coughing up his lung
into that plastic tube—the machine’s wheezing
almost masking the kvetching sisters
in their Brooklyn kitchen.

You can let the crows amaze your son
without your translation of their cries.
You can lie so long under this
summer shower your imprint
will be left when you rise.

You can be stupid and simple as a heifer.
Cook plum and apple turnovers in the nude.
Revel in the flight of birds without
dreaming of flight. Remember the taste of
raw dough in your mouth as you edged a pie.

Feel the skin on things vibrate. Attune
yourself. Close your eyes. Hum.
Each beat of the world’s pulse demands
only that you feel it. No thoughts.
Just the single syllable: Yes

See the homeless woman following
the tunings of a dead composer?
She closes her eyes and sways
with the subways. Follow her down,
inside, where the singing resides.

“Permission Granted” by David Allen Sullivan, from Strong-Armed Angels. © Hummingbird Press, 2008. Reprinted with permission. (buy now)

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bad idea

IMG_1794Photo:  Pam White;  Sculpture:  Gillian Jagger

I am stepping back into the world of horseless dance.  Like Gillian’s sculptures, the ground beneath my feet is marked with hoofprints, indelibly changed from spending fourteen years dancing with horses.  But at this moment, the theater calls.

Besides the time in the studio, besides the dancing, the dreaming, the focusing inward, there is also the parallel underworld of fundraising and booking.  I am trying to make friends with that world.  Not by sucking up to it, but by noticing if there is a way in which it can support me, in which I can offer my work without losing my mind and my soul.I think there is, but viewing myself through that lens can make me question everything about what I am quietly, wildly exploring in the studio.

I went online to one big funding site and looked at a long video of choreography by recipients.  There I found Michelle Ellsworth, whose work so delighted me that I Googled her further.  She is a gorgeous mover, a witty performer and exactly the kind of person I would like to hang out with for an afternoon at Starbucks.  I watched some of her videos online, and this one gave me pause.   What I found intriguing and disturbing was how easily I was convinced that what I had been working on was, in fact, a bad idea.

It isn’t really.  But doubt is the demon that besieges artists, my quicksand of choice.  It is the outfit I wear when I am filling out grant applications, or even thinking about it.  It is the great derailer.  So check it out, if you dare.

MV 103: You Had A Bad Idea from michelle ellsworth on Vimeo.

108

 

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November 16 was the 108th birthday of Pam’s mother, Polly, who passed twenty years ago.  My father, Paul, who also passed twenty years ago, would be ninety-eight.  That twenty years seems inconceivable.  I feel them both so clearly.  Not all of the time, but often and intensely.  Pam’s mother was a beautiful, artful, elegant woman.  My father was also beautiful and elegant.  They were both also difficult, cold at times, remote and cruel.  That is not what I remember.  I remember Polly’s grace, her dignity, her expansiveness, and her fine attention to detail.  I remember her beauty.  With my father, I remember his humor, which was often corny, his enthusiasm and sweetness.

When my father was dying, he said that there were things he could not forgive himself for.  In the ten months of his dying, I had forgiven everything.  I did not want to spend a single moment in regret or blame.  I wanted a perfection of love.  I wanted to pour that into him.  I told him that there was nothing that I was holding.  That all of whatever that was, was past, and that now was the time to cherish now.  I don’t know if that comforted him.  I like to think that it did.  What I do know is that I became a better person for loving him so fiercely, so completely.  That was his gift to me, and mine to him.

In yesterday’s meditation with Deepak Chopra, the centering thought was “I am free.”  I could feel that in fact I am not in so many ways.  I could also feel, sitting quietly, that the freedom I seek is not a destination, but a realized perfection that comes on each exhale in each moment.  Remembering that, I am free.

 

a gift resides in every moment

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Like this (Sky Guide) app that I discovered accidentally while looking at the new iPad Air.  It has me outside looking at the stars!

Like the wonderful meditation series, Desire and Destiny from Oprah and Deepak Chopra that has Pam and me meditating every morning and every evening together.  Today’s centering thought was “I am free.”  Yesterday’s centering thought was “a gift resides in every moment.”

Like my friends Annie and Stan coming for a visit.

The warm two days that have allowed me to get outside and clean up the gardens.

The inspiration of finding music for a new solo that I am creating.

The real gift though, is simply being present, letting breath open each moment, finding simple sensual, pleasure here, now.