Category Archives: horses, dogs & more

what happened on the way

              Jacopo Bellini

Today as we were driving to Sarah Lawrence College to see a dance performance that our daughter had helped to choreograph, we flew by a flailing dear in the middle of a hideously busy highway.  We pulled over immediately.

As I walked back up the highway, cars flew by.  I was sure that I would see the deer shattered in the road.  But instead, it had made its way to the side of the road, helped by two young women who had seen it and stopped before we had.  The accident had happened in the northbound lane, and somehow the deer ended up on the southbound side.

Its back legs were broken, and it was obviously in terrible pain.  The two young women had called the police, who said they were coming but that the police could not shoot the deer.  It was an animal control issue.

Here is the shocking part.  A young man stopped by the side of the road not to help, but to video the struggling women and the dying deer.  During the 30 minutes we waited for the police to come, hundreds of cars tore by us and only one person, a woman, stopped to inquire if we were ok.

When the police did finally arrive, the young officer said that he would shoot the deer.  By then, it had dragged itself even further into the thicket.  He did shoot it, which was the kindest thing.  We prayed the Buddhist prayer for the dying as it died:  om tara tutare ture soha.  Over and over.

This is a terrible story.  The violent death of this deer is terrible enough.  The worst part, however, is the indifference of others who witnessed it, and the idiotic voyeur with the camera. That is the unforgivable part.

There we were, four women, standing guard, waiting, not willing to leave an animal suffering.  That does not make us heroic.  It makes us human.  Suffering should touch us.  It should draw us in. It should open our hearts, stop us in our tracks, elicit our best selves.

I am uncomfortable on a soapbox.  But this made me very, very angry, deeply pained.  I was reminded of a conversation that I overheard at a cafe.  A woman, laughing derisively, said to her dining partner, “Oh, she’s the type that stops to take a squirrel off the road.”  Yes, I am.

 

 

 

 

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can you help? thank you!

I don’t usually do an outright ask on the blog.  And I will not do it often.  This is an ask for help with our new horse dancing project, All the Pretty Horses.

Since I started working with rescued horses, it has been my dream to create a performance with these “throw away” horses and local dancers.  We have now found the perfect partnering organization, Little Brook Farm in Old Chatham, New York.

Little Brook has been saving horses for many, many years.  The unique part of their program is that these horses then become active, participating partners in a range of activities:  riding, performing, vaulting, jumping and teaching generations of children and adults about horses and all of the ways that we can connect with them.

A visit there is moving.  It is a humble place, staffed by passionate and dedicated volunteers.  The effort goes into the programs, into the care of the horses, and into sharing the joy of horses with humans from age three to the sky is the limit.

In order to bring the project to fruition, we need to raise $3500 to offset fees and travel for the professional dancers from my company who travel from Boston.  Those funds are also for publicity, costumes and modest administrative costs to assure that the event is a rousing success.

The performance will take place October 6 at Little Brook Farm in Old Chatham, NY.  Mark your calendars!!!

Please help us to whatever extent you can.   Dancemakers Inc. is a 501(c)3 non-profit organization. Donations are fully tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. To contribute, click on the link below or make your check payable to Dancemakers Inc. and send to the address below.

Dancemakers, Inc.

P.O. Box 773
Sharon, CT 06069

soto voce

  for Jon, Maria and Izzy

the tulip is singing

a song for the broken-hearted.

a song of grief

and a song of rejoicing.

a song of remembering

and of forgetting

of holding and letting go.

I ask myself these questions:

can you let yourself be sung?

(the melody is unknown)

can you let yourself be danced?

(there are no steps)

can you open and open again,

trembling in the wake

of this fierce music?

 

 

 

 

the help

I read this poem, “When you Can’t Stop Crying”  by Jon Katz on Friday morning and burst into tears   It has been a raw, dark week for me.  There is a part of me that cannot feel into what is coming, or that fears what is coming and prefers not to look.

And then there is my beloved, beloved Capprichio, nose in the grass, hooves on the earth, eye to me, reminding me to taste what is here right now, to stand where I am and breathe all of this in.  And today, when I was appreciating him, and appreciating the warmth, and appreciating the opening blossoms om my crab apple tree, the lilacs, the sun I could feel a budding possibility, beyond my control, beyond even my ability to imagine.

This weekend I am traveling to Minnesota to visit my sister.  Janet is one of the most ebulliant and optimistic people I know.  When the genetic cards were being dealt, she got those.  Whenever I see her, I say I am going to get an infusion of “Janergy.”

Next post from St. Paul.