Saturday, December 17, 2005

you step on the hem of my pants
worn with memories before you
stained with a past that haunts
and defines me

your smell penetrates my fiber
as you hold me through the night
and then go home to her

your heart beats me senseless
as you dance me through the night
and let me drive home in the rain

"i'd probably be happier with you"
you say

your foot clamps down on a thread of hope
and my layer of defense
unravels at your will

Tuesday, December 13, 2005

here is my problem. i haven't written in so long i'm having a hard time separating things.... it's all mush. so until i can remove thought from muck, i'll leave you all with a quote from Barbara Kingslover's Animal Dreams:

"What keeps you going isn't some fine destination but just the road you're on, and the fact that you know how to drive. You keep your eyes open, you see this damned-to-hell world you got born into, and you ask yourself, 'What life can I live that will let me breathe in and out and love somebody or something and not run off screaming into the woods?'"

Sunday, December 04, 2005

holy molies.

the last blog was september 29th............ oops.

i'll cry that same old song and blame it on student teaching - the black hole sucked me in for 60 some-odd days. but i'm juuuuust about finished with that, and will hopefully get back into some creative modes.

i've got Oklahoma! rehearsals starting up soon - i think auditions are going to be in the next couple weeks.

i want to get ian to drive with me to chi-town with the fam and then bug out early to come see yall in the MD - but this all depends on his internship stuff for school.

so, as always, it seems life is getting in the way. sigh.

WE CAN DOOO THIS.

Thursday, September 29, 2005

doubts galorious

gahhhh i know it's been FOR-EH-VER and i apologize profusely. and, truthfully, i'd much prefer to be spending my time writing and brainstorming and creating. but instead i'm student teaching and my bubble has been officially popped. i haven't really said this to anyone yet, but i'm definitely having doubts. do i really want to be a teacher? and an english teacher, at that? i feel like i'm sucking incredibly hard. and last night was the first time i started to feel better about it. we had a guest speaker at our seminar and, after seeing tapes from his first year of teaching, he wrote in his journal, "I should not be teaching." i guess the first year or two is just supposed to be survival, keeping your head above water. but i feel so dull and ill-prepared and all sorts of things. i want to run to my bed and hide under my covers and ignore it all. i want to throw myself into just becoming a writer or an entrepreneur... or something, anything but a teacher.

....


but somewhere in there i know that's not really what i want. i mean, i know i will always be working with kids and teenagers and people in some capacity. it's just that right now i need to learn how to do that effectively as an english teacher. sigh. i just don't know if i can.


....



on another, unrelated note, NEXT WEEKEND IS GOING TO ROCK THE HOUSE. after a week which includes my first observation and parent's night, i'm going to need some moral support and distraction. and you three are just the remedy.

LOVES.

(oh, and as for my show... i don't have too much to report, except that i am running a bi-monthly choreography workshop with a few of my girls from the studio. and i'm definitely going to double dip and make that a workshop for show ideas as well.)

(oh and E... mike walsh might be a possible drummer. do you know/remember him? and what do you think about that?)
her voice dripped with condescension
and in that moment
any lingering respect and admiration
plummeted from the sky
and stabbed chicken little in the back

i now wear my disenchantment
on a too small sleeve
torn to shreds
freed from adolescent delusion
what started as a scribble
grows and trickles
tickles and flows

a lightning storm
it pulses
thought electrified

a controlled chaos
it bulges
synapses tangled
together
into intrigue

into a design
that once was disaster
i want you
to
trickle into
my
consciousness

Friday, August 26, 2005

first sammi installment

Rain streamed down the windows and flung itself away as the ill-fated car tore through the streets. Black velvet sky wrapped around white picket fenced houses where young children were safely tucked away in bed – all except for one. The celestial lights had vacated the heavens, leaving only two headlights flailing in space, yearning for a resting place – for peace. Lightening sliced through the darkness and with that single crack of thunder a whole world fell to pieces.

She screamed from the backseat, with piercing wisdom and grief – like somehow she already knew her father had made one of the biggest mistakes of his life, like she knew this man who was single-handedly supposed to be watching out for her was incapable of looking out for himself. Tears filled her big, brown eyes as she looked to her only parent for comfort. Her father’s unsteady hands loosely held the wheel as he turned around to face her – one last penetrating look before both lives lost all recognition of their past.

The car swerved. The tires hit the curb. The sky swirled around them; and with a breath of hesitation, it crashed into the ground.

That was the night that changed everything; choices were made by two people, tearing the fabric of an existence I thought was mine, and sending a little girl on the most bittersweet ride she would ever know. True it was only for a year – but in one moment we both saw fallibility in those we once found flawless. And in one moment we were tragically linked by the very heartstrings we felt tearing away.

This is a story that spans three generations; it tests the strength of family and the very quality that courses through our veins. It is also a story of discovery and hope, and of finding out what truly matters and holding onto it for dear life.
__________________________________________________________

From: Kathy Grinold
To: tbina7@hotmail.com
Subject: Deb
Date: Fri, 25 Apr 2003 13:33:41

Hi Tiner,

I’m very sorry to have to tell you like this, but Deb died yesterday (the 24th) at 6:15pm. She finally got to Columbia/Presbyterian Hospital in Manhattan on Tuesday, but she just kept going downhill. Wednesday night Kevin drove home to get a change of clothes and to sleep in a bed for a change, and got a call Thursday morning that she was deteriorating. He drove back down, but by the time he got there she was on life support, but there was no brain activity. So he had her removed from the machines and she died yesterday evening.

One of the last things she said to me was to tell you not to worry about not being here and to enjoy the rest of your trip. I know that will be difficult for you now, but that’s really all you can do. Of course, the prayers are still helpful, that she find her way in the next world, and feel loved and comforted… and you can do that from wherever you are.

Kevin is doing as well as can be expected, in fact is experiencing some sense of relief. She is no longer struggling and in pain. The ordeal really took a toll on him. Sammi doesn’t really understand much. I don’t know exactly what he has told her. I spent time with her yesterday afternoon and she didn’t know what was going on. We left it to Kevin to explain.

I’m sending you a big, big hug and can’t wait to see you to do it in person. We love you Tiner. Keep smiling and keep sending your best thoughts!

Love and hugs,
Mama
__________________________________________________________

There I was, on a ship in the middle of the Pacific Ocean – having just finished an Acting final where I’d played Krishna from the Mahabharata – reading and rereading that letter from my mother. I stopped seeing the words; they were just a blur. And I couldn’t find any air in my lungs. There I was, on a trip circumnavigating the globe, gallivanting around, while my aunt had lain dying in a hospital. And my baby cousin had been robbed of her mother at age five.

Have you ever seen a cat run full speed into a glass door? Well, that’s how I felt. All I wanted from the world in that moment was to be there. But I couldn’t. Running out onto the deck, I gasped at the sea air, chest heaving, and I slammed myself into the railing that held me prisoner.

Suddenly my body weight was too heavy and, slipping to the deck, my tears burned my flesh before adding themselves shamelessly to the ocean below.
___________________________________________________________

In memoriam ~
As I sit here to write this, it should be about 9pm on April 26th back at home. For me, it’s lunchtime and we are currently sailing through Alaskan waters. I can see the gorgeous volcanic mountain range of the Aleutian Islands from my porthole as we steadily approach our 2nd to last port of call. Technically I’m in the US. So, technically, I’ve sailed around the world. The pressures are already beginning: to put a name on my feelings, to label my experiences, to pick a favorite place. But how can I begin to do those things when I’m currently struggling to find a place for myself in this world I’ve just been traveling through?

Today I’m discovering the impossibility of that task; today when I consider the importance of Mother.

Since I left in January, there have been so many changes. Changes in myself, the global community, and the lives of the people I love and hold closest to my heart. This ship is a bubble-world, a little microcosm of home. The SS Universe has been our Great White Mother to whom we run when things get tough or when we just need to curl up in a ball and hide from reality. She’s also provided blissful separation for us, her passengers and children. But while I’ve been becoming acquainted with Mother Earth and her various places and peoples, my own motherland has been forever altered.

In the absence from my former life, a war has begun, a deadly virus has been loosed on the world, and my aunt has passed away. Each of these things have affected me in ways that could never be expected or fully explained. I’m ten days away from being home. Being that close, but not being there during this time when I should be with my family … the helplessness is overwhelming. Last night while standing on deck, with dawn approaching, looking out at the ocean and off into eternity I thought, “If I could jump ship and swim to shore, I’d do it in an instant, just to be there.” Something my mother said to me in her email – the email – resonated in my mind, “One of the last things she said to me was to tell you not to worry about not being here and to enjoy the rest of your trip. I know that will be difficult for you now, but that’s really all you can do.” My mother, my mama, the one who is sending me a big, big hug and can’t wait to do it in person. I can’t imagine not having that. But Sammi won’t. My baby cousin has just lost her Mother.

Debbi would always call the house and say, “Hey, it’s your favorite aunt!” and then would proceed to give me a hard time about any and everything she could. Our sarcastic interchanges were code for how much we cared for each other and enjoyed each other’s company. After Sam was born and as I grew older, I began to feel like Deb was more of a friend than an aunt. She would sometimes break down to me and say, “I’m so tired of being sick.” She wanted so badly to be healthy and able to do all the things she wanted to do. I found myself trying to find the words to comfort her, the same words that just don’t seem to matter now.

When I was ready to leave for Semester at Sea, she started to cry and told me she didn’t like that I would be out in the ocean somewhere on the other side of the globe instead of a couple hours north in New Hampshire. Was she trying to tell me her time was running out? Was she trying to say goodbye? Last night, when I got the news of her death, did she make me hold off on checking my email until after my final performance was over? Was she trying to protect me until I would be able to take the time to grieve? I think so. Deb was always so fascinated with the existence of angels and I believe she is now among them.

Though I know her suffering has finally ended, I still feel powerless. What can I do? I’m a bird in a cage, wanting to break free. I’m a missing puzzle piece wanting so much to finish the pattern that is my family. I’m constantly sending my love, my prayers, my meditations – I can only hope that is enough, because it is really all I can do. I can’t be there to hug my uncle and look into his eyes, because the words I’d be searching for just wouldn’t suffice. I can’t be there to hold my little munchkin; I can’t take her outside to blow bubbles and watch them float into the wind … an attempt to ease her pain, her confusion, her blissful naivety. I won’t be there to see Deb’s face one last time. I won’t be able to throw a blossom symbolizing my love into the grave, to say goodbye and to begin the healing process along with everyone else. These are the things I’d hoped for when the emails, the sickeningly impersonal emails that have been the only thing connecting me to these events, started looking bad.

How selfish I’ve been in wanting to travel, move around, spend a few years here and a few years there – all of the things that take me away from the people I love. Am I really as independent as I thought? Am I really capable of moving that far away from home again, for that long? Do I want to remove myself from the lives and happenings of my motherland? Can I deal with this feeling again, the feeling of seemingly not caring enough to be there, or of letting my loved ones down in some way?

I suppose, through it all, various forms of Mother will always be there; whether in biological, figurative, associative, or even angelic form. Mother is not a thing that can die. It’s more than just a person. It’s the purest form of love and support. Although the home I’m returning to in ten days can never be the same place I left 3 months ago, the universal Mother-spirit will remain the same. I will get my big, big hug from my mom. And someday when Sammi wants that same big, big hug from her mother, I hope I can be there to tell her that’s it’s always there in some form. You just need to ask. Mother can never leave you.

RIP Debrah O’Briant ~Peace and Love Forever.
__________________________________________________________

My dad read this aloud at the funeral. I wanted some representation of me there even if it was physically impossible at the time. At a later family gathering, I griped to one of my cousins, as a whiny child impersonating a broken record, “I wish I could have been there.” He looked me square in the face for one of the longer moments I’ve sat through and said, “Tina, you were more there than any of us.”

Tuesday, August 23, 2005

note on Sammi post:

this is the second installment of the work i've started on this project. i know liz read the beginning, but i'm not sure that b or mikey has.... let me know, boys, if you want to read the beginning parts.

also, i'd love any feedback on this. it could very easily turn into a larger memoir piece. let me know where you think i could open up into larger sections - chapters, if you will - and where things might get confusing or repetitive, or really anywhere you'd like to comment on. the more the better.

love.

flailin in a whirl pool

i'm swirling around, reaching my toes down for solid ground. there's so much to do and so much i want to do, but little to no time to do it in.

i'm not trying to complain. instead i'm looking at that evanescent thing called time. honestly, sometimes i think it's my worst enemy. and other times it's a best friend.

time heals. we've all heard that one, and i believe it's true. but scabs rip and phantom pains haunt.

there's not enough time in the day. let me tell you, as a grad student who just finished 21 credits in a summer, i've felt very strongly about this one on many occasions. and as a student teacher, starting in t-minus 5 days, this is still very much an issue.

aaand....

timing's everything. especially when you start falling harder than you planned. for someone who's already in love. with someone else.

fuck you, time. i want you to come to a screaming hault so i can tip toe around, take a breath, and figure out the what's, the when's, the how's, the where's and wherefor's of my life.

;alkfj;alkfj;asldjfa;sdlfja;sdlfj.

so there.

sammi

This was one of those crazy college weekends that you look back at and say, “Man, we were a complete waste of space. But it was awesome!” My roommates and I had spent two years living above Town and Campus in apartments that, shall we say, had… character. Our current apartment was previously an office of some kind, so our living room came complete with coat hooks in the wall, a random left over door which we decorated and left leaning in the corner, and a fully operational old fashioned sink which we filled with water and housed our faithful pet rubber ducky. The walls were painted midnight blue by the last tenants, so we strung Christmas lights around the perimeter, surrounded the room with our Salvation Army sofa, futon, satellite chair, scattered pillows, and we called it a day. Our kitchen table was the graffitied beer pong table, which had once been a bedroom door from our last apartment, and the window in my room had roof access. For all immediate purposes, this apartment was prime for a few twenty one year olds and their friends.

So this weekend, my brother and some of his wacked out buddies were coming to visit. Our track record was pretty good. When people come to visit us, we usually deliver unforgettable times. UNH kids know how to party; and we partied artfully. We generally stayed away from frats and the people we associated with being involved in that scene – unless, of course, we dressed up in crazy costumes just to crash. Instead, we counted on each other for amusement.

Weekends of this sort usually included things such as 4am outings to the launder mat to play in the dryers and climb onto rooftops, or rollerblading excursions across campus when most of the die-hards had returned to bed. We’d been known to break into locked up residence halls before school was in session just to play the grand piano, or spray paint phrases such as, ‘You are being lied to,’ or, ‘Everything you know is wrong,’ on the back walls of the student union – and we nearly shit our pants when it showed up the following Tuesday in The New Hampshire. We savored deep philosophical conversations on our roof while staring at the stars, beach drives and trips to the ocean (where some would venture a swim in the nearly freezing water), lighting fireworks on an open field (somehow succeeding in lighting grass on fire and attracting the attention of the local five-oh), and any other spontaneous notion that might flit it’s way into our thoughts. This weekend was no disappointment.

To cap off this fun-filled few days in Durham, the lot of us took a field trip down to Hampton Beach – music blaring, enjoying being in the now – and to the nearest Taco Bell we could find. As we sat there in our Burrito, Chalupa, Cheesy Gordita glory, my brother says to me, “So. Have you talked to Mom?”

“Not since last week,” I replied, thinking this was no more than a silly story about her classroom. She always talks to us about the kids as if we know them all intimately. It’s endearing, actually; she adores her job and she’s damn good.

“Yea, so…” he sucks down some air before the plunge: “Kevin was driving drunk the other night and flipped his car.” His eyes break from mine as he takes an unnaturally large bite of his beloved Cheesy Gordita Crunch. The Band-Aid was torn; smarting, I had to respond.

“… uh…” slowly shaking the disbelief from my skull, “Is he ok?” Then it hit me, Mack truck Reality, “Where was Sam?!” trying hard to keep hysteria out of my voice.

“She was in the car.” He’s stopped eating and is looking at me again. My eyeballs are wide, wildly searching his for the punch line. The dread washes in.

“WHAT!?!?!” Usually at this point, he tells me to quiet down. I have a tendency to explode, irrespective of my surroundings. This was no exception, but this time he let it go.

“Yea. In the car. He lost custody of her.”

“…..” I can only imagine what my gaping face must look like.

“They’re both ok. I guess she had to spend the night at the hospital for observation. And now she’s staying at our house. No one really knows what’s going on or what’s gonna happen,” my eyebrows furrowed so deeply that my head started to hurt, “And Dad’s not talking to Mom.”

My heart pounded through my chest. I wondered why the others couldn’t see it, in 3-dimensional Pepe Lepew style. I continued eating and carrying on pieces of the other conversations swirling around me. I drifted in and out, sometimes staring out the gaudy advertisement-ridden windows, not looking at any one thing in particular. I would sometimes snap out of the daze, fighting nausea, and sigh, “I can’t believe this.”
________________________________________________________
I walked in the door, sat down on my bed, dialed home, and waited. I waited three rings and wanted to scream.

“Hello?” The voice on the other end sounded tired, weak.
“Mom. Why didn’t you call me!”

“Sorry T. It’s been crazy around here and I’m not getting a whole lot of help.” Well, obviously. Dad’s ignoring her and Ian came to New Hampshire. Now, you’re probably wondering why my father would be so insensitive – be patient, I’ll get there.

“I know Mama. I’m just a little shocked. Tell me what’s happening.” My insides melted. It was rare that my mother weakened. She is one of the strongest, smartest people I know, and if she is having trouble with something it is clearly a challenge. I found myself transported back to another dark night. It was September of my first high school year, the night she learned of her mother’s death. She shook and she cried and all I could do was hug her, be strong for the woman who, until then, had always been strong enough for the rest of us. By the sounds of it, she was again trying desperately to hold it all together – for the sake of the family.

“Well. It’s been a zoo around here this week. Between DCF and Deb’s family coming by constantly to see Sam, I can barely keep things organized let alone get things settled for her. Luckily, we’re on April vacation, so I was able to get over to Birch Grove and sign her up for school.”

“So this is going to be for a while, then.”

“As long as it takes.”

“As long as what takes?”

“For the state and the court to figure out what to do. They’ve already taken away Kevin’s license.”

“Well, GOOD.”

“And he’s going to appear before a judge soon. He’s going to have to go to AA and parent retraining and, most likely, therapy. He’ll probably do jail time, too…” Jail. Wow. Switching gears, she murmurs, “You do realize that this was within days of the one year anniversary of…”

“Deb’s death. Yea, I remembered.” It stung. It’d been a year, and I still hadn’t gone to see the grave; I still hadn’t given her my rose, now dry and fragile.

“He’s been going downhill. He’s not been eating. He’s bankrupt. He’s got all of the medical bills still looming over his head. And he feels like none of us are helping him. I drove him to the police station from the hospital, he was still drunk and belligerent, and he was telling me that he had been drowning and nobody noticed, nobody cared.”

“Mom, this is not your fault.” She’s the only girl of five, and Kevin is the baby. After he was born, my grandmother was drinking whiskey daily and not being a very active mother, which had much to do with my grandfathers’ unwillingness to accept some of the boys as his own – but that, too, is another story. So my mother became the surrogate; and she’s felt responsible in that role her whole life. “Listen. I graduate in three weeks and then I’ll be home. We’ll make this work, ok? I’ll take her after school so you can focus on the end of the year.” Somehow I always knew something like this was going to happen, a moment of truth. This was a time when my spirit could shine, and I wasn’t about to lose my chance. I was going to make up for missing the funeral, for not being as active in Sammi’s life as I had wanted. I would be strong enough for all of us; we would not fall apart.

This was my role, right now, there was no turning back – forget all the other plans of traveling abroad, teaching English in Japan, or moving to San Francisco. My family needed me, so that’s where I needed to be. But, man, I had no idea what I was getting myself into.
_______________________________________________________

She came tearing into my life
A ball of fire
Scalding me with what’s real
And true, when

Truthfulness
Hanged at the gallows
Suffocated
And broken
A value forgotten
It fades
As mist at dawn

She came into my home
Took my bed
My room
My space

She took my mother
And made me a mother too

She screamed
She sassed
She cried
She laughed

She pushed

Every last button
Every last nerve

Tuesday, August 09, 2005

regroup sesh

hi boys and girl.

to regroup:

i'm so psyched about our week together, even if it didn't seem as productive as you might have wanted, lizzzzzzzzz. and i'm simultaneously sad that it's over - honestly, i feel like we stand in that driveway waving goodbye to yall more than is good for the health. but overall, i think just hangin out and doin dumb stuff is what makes us... us. and we certainly did that. so good job! pats on backs all around! PLUS. we cut dreads off. that's an unprecedented event that should not be downplayed. AND we ate taco bell, watched movies, took pictures (this time with pants on...) AND we lit off fireworks. AND. we hung out with cows. AND. we made friends with teenage druggies in boston..... hm. anyways... you get the point.


i'm just gonna do a lil 'to do' list for my show (i HEART to do lists):

-write grant letters
-submit said letters
-meet with Nancy Dunn re- ideas for performance places and if it's worth it to move away from Tolland Youth Services (which i def. want to do, because then it becomes more legitimately part of our business venture)
-meet with Roets' for ideas
-call all local HS's to check on pricing, seating, stage sizes
-make a contact list of all people already signed on, send out welcome email/letters
-come up with interview questions for the documentary portion
-come up with list of pop culture images/songs/clips that might encapsulate theme
-solidify theme
-start solidifying story line/framework/get idea of how many scenes/pieces are going to be needed
-put out feelers for musicians (we have only Ian at this point.... need drummer, bassist, piano, others if wanted...)



aaaaaaaaaaand that's all i can think about right now. lemme know if you think i missed anything.

tear

tearing through the street
hair flailing
wailing the tunes
pounding the wheel
trying to stop shock waves
receiving perceiving
infesting her mind
with impossibilities
looking up
searching for
the moon
bleeding moments past
stumbling away
from fluorescent color
and into a landscape
of memories
choking on
pointlessness
hopelessness
and what fors
sobbing for every sob not made
crying for every lesson not learned
justice not served
story not told
salt water flows from her eyes
home
to the ocean
rolling seething
under a moon so constant
in unconstancies
in knowledge
in wisdom
overwhelming
it's beams
tear into the ocean
too.

forgotten truth

truthfulness
hangs at the gallows
suffocated
choked
and broken
a value forgotten
it fades
as mist at dawn

Monday, July 11, 2005

screaming myself hoarse into a vacuum of fears

Sunday, July 10, 2005

swelling

unfallen tears
dew drops
swelling

saturate the untorn
fabric of my heart

Tuesday, July 05, 2005

number nine, number nine...

another inspiration from the beatles!

listen to Revolution 9 off of the White Album.

i want a crazy sound engineered piece (B, that's all you!!) with voices, obscure sounds, a bit of warped melody....

this will be a scene kind of like the tornado in The Wizard of Oz... with a smattering of the pieces from the beginning of the show... themes and motifs haphazardly thrown togeter... chaotic entrances and exits... wacky lighting... flashes of multimedia (the documentary pieces, photos, etc)... musicians moving about in the mayhem as well - as they won't necessarily have to be playing....

it's kind of an identity crisis where all the pieces flail about looking for meaning, for a place to land....

this will happen right before the resolution of the whole show...

confusion followed by order. craziness followed by calm (this scene i haven't conceptualized yet).

Monday, June 27, 2005

another...

trio - tapper. break dancer. jazzer.

instrumentation - drums. bass. guitar/saxophone.

concept- hacky sack game.

drum improv, tap answer.
bass, break dance answer.
guitar, jazz answer.

reverse it. dancers initiate, musicians answer.

gradually speeds up. mess with order. mix up instrumentation/dancer groupings. overlap.

end with high energy breakdown.

a thought or two

Monologues.
Poems.
News Clips.
Word groupings.

Spoken by actors on stage. With specific staging. (this will provide the framework for dancers) ... initially spoken one at a time... ideally with dramatic spot lighting.

Each speaker paired with a solo dancer.... movement improv'd to the words, intensity, location of actor on the stage. By the time of performance this will be organized into general ideas to avoid confusion - but still open for manipulation.

Mess with overlapping, slicing, intermixing, interlacing words, speakers, dancers.

No music. Voice, silence, movement are vehicles for communication in this portion. (perhaps musicians can help/double as speakers here, as well as dancers)

Saturday, June 25, 2005

amen sista

'there is a vitality, a life force, an energy, a quickening, that is translated through you into action, and because there is only one of you in all time, this expression is unique. and if you block it, it will never exist through any other medium and will be lost.' -martha graham

eighth grade dance, anyone?

CHALLENGE.

so this is part of this whole plan that i have yet to embrace. but last night i had an inspiration. a hilarious one at that.

so, anyone ever been to a country western bar? I HAVE. and they're great. we're talking line dances for every country song ever written. we're talking electronical bull. we're talking hip-hop-hump-me songs interspersed. we're talking eighth grade dance remniscent slow dances. and it's 18+ to boot.

not a second goes by that you're not smiling, laughing, or having a fantabulous time.

REQUIREMENT- ride the bull. and try the dances. even if you feel like a fool, that's where the fun lies. even do the electric slide, the macarena, and "POOR SOME SUGAR ON MEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!!!!"

i'm such a fan. and we need to do this. if and when y'all come to CT, we're going. or we can do it in MD. i'm sure there are places. and it will be grrrrrrrrrrrrreat!

Tuesday, June 21, 2005

but i'm not the only one

Imagine there's no Heaven
It's easy if you try
No hell below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people
Living for today

Imagine there's no countries
It isn't hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no religion too
Imagine all the people
Living life in peace

You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will be as one

Imagine no possessions
I wonder if you can
No need for greed or hunger
A brotherhood of man
Imagine all the people
Sharing all the world

You may say that I'm a dreamer
But I'm not the only one
I hope someday you'll join us
And the world will live as one


it's funny the little signs you receive everyday, if you just open up your senses to it. i went to bed thinking all my little thoughts about how to put together this framework for the show - which seems to encapsulate more than that... the whole theory of this 'venture' and even my whole theory on education.... something that just happened without my even realizing it - and in the morning, on a completely blank slate state of mind, the first song i hear is a beautiful rendition of lennon's 'imagine'.

and something resonated inside.

perhaps at the beginning there can be a collage of songs, video clips, photos, images, etc, from pop culture and the media..... specifics blended together to build a bigger picture? or maybe the collage at the beginning could be of images and video clips that we create? because that would be keeping with the whole original work concept. but maybe sampling and then supplementing our own stuff with it would be effective too - all rapper-esque....

hmmm.....

if nothing else, this song is just another piece to a larger whole. it's so simple. yet so seemingly unattainable in the world today. an ideal. a hope. a plea.

Monday, June 20, 2005

synapses...

we started off with the melting pot metaphor.
problematic because we can't all melt into one identical being.
plus that would be ridiculously boring.

then we stepped up to the salad bowl metaphor.
better because it recognizes diversity.
problematic because it doesn't allow for intermixing, overlap, growth.

enter: kaleidescope metaphor.
ding ding ding! we have a winner!
we have our multi-colored, individually shaped pieces...
and they're rotated, rocked, and rolled...
they move in and out of eachother
with light shining through
blending boundaries
making poetry
beautiful colors
and shapes
harmoniously linked,
dependent upon one another

.................

so here's the thought: frame our show on the kaleidescope metaphor, but don't begin there. we have to show some sort of journey, struggle, process before the acceptance, the 'dance of differences' occurs. and we don't even necessarily have to frame it overtly on racism, or ethnic diversity. we could zoom out a little and just look at discrimination in general (we've all seen it in multiple settings and degrees).

people naturally gravitate toward comfort zones, and most of the time those zones include people like themselves or an environment just like home. when the "other" creeps into that territory, all sorts of mayhem ensues.

so there should be a few different sub-plots, mini-stories, conflicts - perhaps depicted with different dance styles showing the different groups, but that doesn't necessarily have to be the indicator - and all the while having poetry, monologue, film, projected photography, etc, interspersed and, of course, incendiary music permeating.

.................

comments, questions, ideas, volunteered services (for piecing together a "storyline" especially) are WELCOME!!

Friday, June 17, 2005

"if you can't make waves, make ripples"

fresh air

a breath of fresh air. that's what this was. i sat down for 4 straight hours with a long lost friend who just popped right back into my life in a huge way.... and we talked dance. the whole time! we talked about what we've done, what we're doing, where we're going. we exchanged ideas and opinions. we played movement games. we talked improv. we talked strategies. we watched tapes of her past performances - and were brought to tears by them. we just let ourselves run around for a while in that part of us we love so much.

she helped me feel like i'm doing something good. like i'm actually making an impact on the small town, recital oriented, closed minded type studio that i'm working at. and i'm starting to believe her (though it's hard), because we have the same roots. we started there together and went off and i came back. she did not. and her outside perspective is invaluable.

"i'm so excited you're actually following through and doing something. that's exactly what this little town, connecticut needs."

i agree. i'm not going to let myself just sit complacently dreaming dreams that will never come true. i will make something happen. i will push myself to continue pushing and learning about choreography. about performance. about what works and what doesn't. about how to stretch boundaries and make connections. i will make a space for other people to explore themselves and their worlds through movement and music and words and each other.

and WE will have the time of our lives doing it.

all i can say is i am forever thankful for the people in my life who share these aspirations and who will just sit down with me for a few hours and mull about in them.

sigh......... a breath of stunning fresh air, indeed.

The Thing is, like, soooo BACK

a 5 a 6 a 5 6 7 8
move!
get out ya seat!
come on everybody do the eagle beat!

it's been two years
since those summers
of fun

of new friends
that became a new family
that put together a show
that blew our minds

not because it was polished
and spectacular
and big

but because it was raw
and personal
and real

it was a brainchild
born of passion
born of the desire
to create
to perform

and be validated

as artists.

It was officially called The Night of the Performing Arts, but that was just for a name's sake. We knew it only as 'The Dance Thing.' And this Thing is what I'm most proud of in my life. 'Twas a place where dancers, musicians, writers, artists got together and made a show of all original work. Amateur, yes, but it was ours. And we were proud. We loved what we did and it bonded us together, fused some part of us into one.

It's now two years later and we still get giddy talking about it. We laugh and sigh and remember. We hum the tunes. We bang out the rhythms and the pulses that ran rampant through us - and still run through us, somewhere.

I'm done reminiscing. I'm done talking about how great it was.

We're bringing it back, ladies and gents. Summer '06. You better believe the Thing will be back. I'm committed. You heard it here first. We're bringin back the crazy all nighters, the laughter, the sprained ankles; the music, the tappity tap tappin, the rappin, the stompin and the beboppin; the extreme heat, the challenges, the insanity, and the jumpin, leapin, spinnin. And we are going to BREAK IT DOWN NOW.... again.

Thursday, June 09, 2005

in the middle

IN THE MIDDLE she called it. And I couldn't think of a better name for this....... this place in life we inhabit......... this place in our artistic, spiritual, human growth. This place filled with mushy boundaries and open horizons. This place where we can choose for ourselves a life of art and love and family - and choose it together. Through togetherness we'll make it to wherever it is we're going. And who can tell where that will be.....

But I know I have these three people who I've cherished as long as I've walked this Earth. We have this magical energy. You can almost see it when we're together. It's like a little imp bouncing back and forth pinball style. The imp makes us do crazy things. Crazy fun things. And those things have barely changed since we were little dumplings doomping about in the backyard.... until here we are: All young adults bound together by this unpenetrable stuff called creativity and our dedication to the inner-imp-child.

Here we are wanting to harness the magic, the energy, the imp... to make our mark. A mark which may or may not end up being expansive in the physical realm. Maybe we'll only affect a small community. Maybe it won't seem so important and world changing. But we'll have lived and tried. And done something. Said some things that were on our minds and in our souls - burning to come out.

What makes us human is our capacity to communicate.... on an intellectual... gutteral... emotional... level. And why not use that. All. the. time. Engage in the life the energy the craziness the calm that bustles around us every second of every minute of every day.

Connect. Feel. Learn. Educate. GROW.

We're in the middle of things and maybe we'll always be. And maybe that's ok. Maybe I'd rather stay in the middle. A perpetual floating island navigating open horizons - full of possibility, hope, struggle, hardship, beauty, and joy.

I'd be proud to live my life forever in the middle..............

alive

you know those ideas, those dreams that make all the bits and pieces of your life seem to make sense... that make you feel like you could actually do something worthwhile.... that make your heart and soul soar?

i love those.

they make me alive.