Category Archives: improvisation life

back in the saddle (almost)

I have been taking a digital sabbatical.  I had not planned on it.  Once I was on sabbatical, I could not figure out how to get back.  The sabbatical was actually a perfect storm of walking pneumonia, Christmas, the birth of my grand daughter and a performance.  Writing fell into the category of later.

So to begin.  This Wordle is what I am invoking for 2013.  Completion of projects – my book, specifically.  Completion of a successful move.  Time to savor.  Some delicious travel.  More effortless inflows of money. Teaching, sharing work, collaborations, partnerships, playful interactions, elegant duets.

Appreciation.  Simple pleasures.  Elaborate pleasures.  Unsolicited opportunities, unexpected delights.  Love.  Happiness. And more, and more.

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january 11 – dancing in the city!

i have not performed solo for many years.  Then something about working with Ryder Cooley last year sparked my performer self and I started to play in the studio.  Pretty soon there was a little dance.  I performed it at Club Helskinki in Hudson last year and then I wanted more, much more.  On January 11, I will perform that solo at Lincoln Center.  It is part of a showcase of artists in conjunction with the big APAP (Association of Performing Arts Presenters) conference that happens every January.  Between 5:30 and 11 pm you can see about 24 companies doing short pieces for $10, hosted by Jodi Kaplan and Booking Dance.

I am excited and a little surprised.  It is not easy for me to do this and yet having reach a certain age, I feel that there is nothing to lose.  The piece is called “Speak,” and is inspired by my recent studies of autism, apraxia, synesthesia and what it means to be full of something to say with no easy way to say it.

Youare invited. Here are the details:  January 11 Performance!

something delicious for the new year

Brain Pickings is my favorite new site.  I found out about it from the New York times, and have been tasting and savoring many of Maria Popova’s discoveries.  This is from the book  How to Be an Explorer of the World: Portable Life Museum by Keri Smith.

I love her multi-sensory, whimsical approach to creativity and the mind.  Reading this book is a great way to start the year!

And if you want more delicious reading, check this out:

on moving and not moving

What I have noticed lately in myself is a strange stillness, an absence of movement.  Once I noticed it, I began to feel it everywhere.  At the computer, watching a movie, driving.  It didn’t felt still, it felt frozen.  I realized that certain activities take me into a state where even breathing is minimal, and the little postural shifts and breath related movement that Laban movement analysts identify as “shape flow” were not there.

Shape flow movements mean the body moving in relationship to the body itself. This could be amoebic movement or  mundane habitual actions, like shrugging, shivering, rubbing an injured shoulder, little shifts and adjustments in a chair or standing etc.  It includes breathing.  It is a kind of baseline of aliveness, of life.  Shape flow movements are also recuperative.  They renew the body at the cellular level and keep us “in the flow” of life and liveliness. When shape flow is absent, the body has begun to atrophy.  That is what I noticed.I was feeling a deadening, like cellular lockdown.  Is that something that happens with aging, I wondered.

So I have started flowing, little movements, bigger breaths salted in with the smaller.  Like a continual little improvisational dance with myself. Try it.  See what happens.