Tag Archives: dance
the whole, the parts
After I wrote the post on Nelson, talking about the “basic, homogenized body”, I thought about the other side of that coin: the separate and distinct flavors of the body. A little like the difference between Western cuisine, which strives for combinations of flavors, and Japan, where there is more of an emphasis on meals consisting of distinct foods, each retaining their own individual taste and appearance.
When I first started to ride, I was overwhelmed by all of the sensory information from my own body and the horse’s body – like trying to listen to about five hundred radio stations at once. After about fifteen years of sifting and sorting, I can (often, not always) selectively tune into one channel at a time. It happens quickly – like a momentary check in: my hips, my legs, his mouth (I feel that in my hands through the reins), each of his legs, my spine, and so on. This requires a light, quick body-mind, one that doesn’t bear down or get stuck in one place. No over-thinking, no aggressive fixing. Corrections happen in a flow, awareness is dextrous and global. That is the goal.
I can feel my lovely trainer, Brandi Rivera, smiling as she reads this. She has seen me get very stuck, heavy-handed and frustrated. When that happens, I am usually not tasting or feeling much of anything. The parts have gotten thick and mushy, like a bad soup. At that moment, I find it helps to tune into the fluid base of the breath, and from there let the mind bloom out to the feast of flavors once again. It’s the same when dancing – sensing the whole while feeling the relationships and qualities of the parts.
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What is Horse Dancing?
I have been a dancer and a lover of horses most of my life. Much of that time was in fact an out of body experience. Years of dance training meant pushing the body, often with very little awareness of what my own body was telling me about pain and limitation. My body was a first of all a vehicle for dancing – I expected it to work. When I found myself hungering to dance with horses, not just ride them, but draw together my two great passions – horses and dance – I discovered to my surprise that it was the horses that brought me most deeply into my body. By learning to communicate clearly with them through the shared language of movement and touch, I also learned how to live more fully and attentively in my own body. Horse Dancing bridges my experiences with horses and my lifelong practice as a mover. It is about what horses can teach us about the wild and subtle language of the body.