{"id":454,"date":"2015-12-02T16:24:14","date_gmt":"2015-12-02T17:24:14","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/thetravelingyogi.com\/?p=454"},"modified":"2024-07-19T14:49:56","modified_gmt":"2024-07-19T14:49:56","slug":"a-letter-to-my-students-create-stories-that-matter","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/thetravelingyogi.com\/index.php\/2015\/12\/02\/a-letter-to-my-students-create-stories-that-matter\/","title":{"rendered":"A letter to my students: Create Stories that Matter"},"content":{"rendered":"
Vincas Greene was Chair of the Department of Dance at Brenau University in Gainesville, Georgia, and worked there for 21 years. Students adored him and affectionately referred to him as “Master Greene”. Upon leaving Brenau and moving to Spokane, Washington, to continue to develop his art form, Greene communicated to his students via a heartfelt letter. That letter, his “last message”, was so inspiring that we wanted to share it with our readers. Maybe you could empower your dance students with a similar message?<\/em> <\/span><\/p>\n My dear dancers,<\/span><\/p>\n I would like to preface this with the note that I love you. You all know Terpsichore is a hard mistress, and we empower her to keep her eagle eyes upon us so that we may constantly be prepared as her emissaries or, as Martha Graham calls us, “Athletes of God”. To this end, I must challenge you to accept these words from a teacher\/friend\/elder\/lover who wants each of you to be the best artist, dancer and person you can possibly achieve.<\/span><\/p>\n The Scottish psychologist R.D. Laing wrote, \u201cLife is a sexually transmitted disease, and the mortality rate is 100 percent.\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n This entwines with our lives as dancers so well \u2013 Dance is passed from one person to another in a centuries’ old chain we can gaze back upon seeing our ancestors as they struggled, loved and taught each other, transmitting their knowledge, discoveries and passions over the years to our most recent teachers, to each of us and then on to our students and, in my case, to my grandchildren of dance. Dance is the physical manifestation of passion, and dancers are the vessels. We become so full of passion it leaps out as dance, love and art. No wonder the world sees us as sensual because our life is communication made physical. Even as our bodies begin to slow, our minds still rage with the exuberance of youth as we picture new dances forming and how our dream-perfect bodies would experience each movement. You can see it in the eyes of our elders as they describe to us past performances and new ideas \u2013 and we can also see it as their bodies still enact, as best they can, each nuance that is being described. But we know that for each of us, eventually, the body and the mind come to perfect stillness and the end of the dance, when the performer leaves the stage.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/p>\n