In dance-years I’m an old lady, but when I do grand jetés I still feel like I can fly

Zumba was my lifeblood for a couple of years, when I thought it could fill the void which the absence of dance left in my life. Around the beginning of this academic year, though, I realized that although zumba is fun, great exercise, and is built of a friendly community, it’s not “real dance.” Zumba-lovers, please excuse my elitist idea of “real dance!” The fact of the matter is that my subjective definition of real dance stems from a lifetime of ballet and pointe, tap, jazz, modern, lyrical, and contemporary. I still enjoy zumba and will continue to participate from time to time, but there comes a point when enthusiastic step-touches and ecstatic booty-shaking are not enough to feed my dance cravings.

I began my hunt for the right dance class– one that was challenging but not too serious, difficult but not too hard on my body, familiar without feeling blasé.

A couple years ago I had regularly attended a contemporary class at a studio with a great teacher, but her choreography involved so much floorwork that my knees and wrists suffered. And don’t even get me started on the bruises covering all the corners of my body– hips, elbows, shoulders, and all the spinous processes of my vertebrae! There’s good pain, like when your muscles are burning with lactic acid, and then there’s bad pain like when you think you might need a hip replacement in your mid-twenties. I decided my body would appreciate a dance style that was more gentle on my joints.

I tried a jazz class at the same studio with a different teacher. This was a great combination of technique exercises, across-the-floor, and choreography. I probably would have continued here had I not discovered the perfect ballet class.

Before I found the perfect ballet class, though, I had to survive the ballet class from hell. Actually, the class itself is awesome if you are a robot ballerina with no sense of fatigue. I am not a robot. I have weaknesses. I am a 23 year old who, in the past, danced eight hours a week, passed ballet examinations held by the Royal Academy of Dance, and skipped school for dance competitions– key words in the past. I took a long break and my technique and strength are not even comparable to what they used to be. In the dance world, I would be considered past my prime at the age of 23. Dancers who train seriously can still have a great career at my age, but I started slowing down and I will never be able to do everything I used to. This is actually a good thing, though, because all that cool stuff I could do was terrible for my joints!

It was a dark and stormy night, that first time I trekked to the ballet studio. I was joined by my sister and friend of mine who also felt nostalgia for ballet. It was pitch black, raining buckets, and dangerously windy. We saw nothing for the vicious raindrops were piercing our eyes sideways under our umbrellas. Drenched, bewildered, and having been lost for 20 minutes in this unfamiliar area of town, we stumbled in and put on our canvas ballet shoes.

The class was not a traditional ballet class with choreographed exercises at the barre and in the center, as we had expected. It was like a ballet-themed army bootcamp with body conditioning like I have never seen before. The teacher was a machine, relentless, and the class followed her valiantly through a workout that targeted the important tiny muscles which ballerinas use (never, ever lift your leg using your quadriceps!).

Meanwhile, the three of us newbies were flailing violently or at times simply stuck, in a position where that tiny muscle was so minuscule that it couldn’t perform the movement. My face was tomato-red, though I looked more like watery ketchup with sweat dripping off me like rain. My muscles were shaking and my heart beating like a jackhammer inside my chest. My pulse was swooshing in my ears and I felt so weak that I almost went numb. The next day, I had a searing migraine and felt so nauseous that I had to miss school to lie limply in bed. The class would have been pure gold for me five or six years ago. At this point in my life, though, this clearly was not the right class for me to begin with!

The following week I had recovered enough to journey back to try a different ballet class at the studio. I had been told it would be a more conventional ballet class, and I was feeling hopeful. They were working on choreography for the recital that day, and without hesitation our lovely, inclusive teacher placed me in the formations and helped me catch up. The choreography was beautiful! My hips don’t turn out as much, my right ankle is stiff when I point my toes, and I’m a little wobbly on one leg, but I fake it as best I can and it feels glorious to dance ballet again.

My favourite moment took place a couple weeks ago when we were practicing jumps across the floor (from corner to corner of the dance studio with traveling steps). It was my first time doing a grande jeté for a few years, and I was slightly worried that mine would be ugly. Jumps used to be one of my stronger points, and I was very proud of my grande jeté back in the day. Now, my splits are no longer perfect, so I hardly expected to be able to leap and do the splits in the air. Glissade, grande jeté, grande jeté! grande jeté!! GRANDE JETÉ!!! Miraculously, there I was, chest lifted, suspended in the air, legs straight and perfectly elongated in the splits! I felt like I was soaring through the air, just as before! When all the factors fall into place, there’s something magical about ballet.

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This is a picture from 2008. Note: This is lyrical dance (not ballet) and what I’m doing is not called a grande jete (both legs would be straight) but it’s close enough!

Krakow is beautiful

The end of January marks the end of the winter semester at our university. During this break, my boyfriend and I decided to take a short trip to Krakow. I visited Krakow a couple years ago with my sister, but it was my boyfriend’s first time in this beautiful city.

This, my second visit to Krakow, was a funny combination of familiar and new. I recognized most of the attractions in Old Town including the main square and Wawel Castle. This time we also discovered the Jewish quarters of town called Kazimierz, a hip and historical area which I somehow overlooked last time. Despite exploring a larger area of the city, I was surprised to find how much smaller Krakow felt this time.

When I traveled to Krakow the first time, I had only lived in Poland for a year and had not seen much of Europe yet. Krakow had a grand appearance and felt massive compared to Gdansk. Not only that, but my sister and I spent the majority of our time being lost. My sense of direction is abysmal, and my sister’s is no better. A city feels huge when you have no idea where you are! I’ve improved considerably in my way, but luckily my boyfriend plays the role of navigator when we travel. That first time in Krakow, the feeling of being lost was also amplified by the torrential downpour of rain which soaked us daily as we sprinted between churches and castles and cafes. With my boyfriend leading the way, I was astonished by how little time it took to walk from Wawel Royal Castle to the Main Square (Rynek Główny).

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This walk might have taken me about an hour or so with my sister

My sister and I fondly remember Krakow as bewildering and beautiful. With my boyfriend this time, Krakow was once again a lovely city to visit. It is one of the few parts of Poland which was spared destruction during WWII.

On our first day we went on a free walking tour of Old Town where we learned a bit about Krakow’s history. This city used to be Poland’s capital (Wawel Castle had been destroyed by a fire one too many times, so the king, frustrated, decided to move to Warsaw). We saw the cloth hall and the main square where merchants used to trade fabric, food, jewelry, tools, and more. The punishment for thievery at the market at the time was having one’s ear cut off; the knife serving this purpose still hangs over the archway.

We enjoyed this free walking tour so much that the next day we joined the same company for a free walking tour of Kazimierz. Our guide showed us the Old Synagogue, the old bath house, cemeteries, and the old slaughterhouse in this Jewish community. This area used to be its own town, independent from Krakow. Krakow and its surroundings were diverse in religion and nationalities at the time. Many buildings in Kazimierz survived WWII simply by luck, as the Nazis found the synagogues useful for storage of weapons and ammunition.

It was uplifting to see the revival of Jewish culture in Krakow today, to serve as a contrast to our guided tour of Auschwitz-Birkenau the following day. I think it is very important for everyone to go there and witness firsthand the remaining gas chambers and crematoriums. It is uncomfortable, disturbing, upsetting, and unfathomable to face the reality of this dark part of our past. Despite this– or perhaps, because of this– it is essential that we learn about it to prevent history from repeating itself.

The following day we ended our stay in Krakow at an Israeli hummus restaurant. With our minds full of new experiences and our stomachs full of food, our train took us back home to Gdansk. Do widzenia, Kraków!

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St. Mary’s church and the cloth hall in the Main Square (Rynek Glowny)

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St. Mary’s church

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The north gate and the remaining part of the wall which surround old town of Krakow

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Behind Wawel Royal Castle. I like this photo because of the contrast of the main road right next to a 700 year old castle– no big deal in Europe, but something you would never see in Canada! 

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Wawel Royal Castle

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Rynek Glowny / Main Square

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Inside the cloth hall in the Main Square

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Rynek Glowny / Main Square

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At Wawel Castle. Parts of the castle burned down and had to be rebuilt

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At the apartment we shared with a local architecture student

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In Kazimierz, the Jewish quarters of Krakow

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In Kazimierz, the Jewish quarters of Krakow

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In Kazimierz, the Jewish quarters of Krakow: the cemetery and the old bath house

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Hamsa hummus restaurant in Kazimierz