Blog: Showbiz Kid

Spin Cycle

Hips come and hips go, and my beloved dance teacher Doug has now had both of them replaced. His latest hospital outing brought him bionic hip number two and the requisite helping of pain.

After six weeks, he’s dancing like a pro again. He’s Gene Kelly meets Iron Man. He may be in his seventies, but he still sports the wide and mischievous grin of a naughty teenage boy.

Doug’s jazz class caters to Boomer girls and beyond; fellow dance devotees who’ve been twirling around in search of our inner Isadoras since puberty. We’ve got our Bob Fosse moves down. We’ve performed here and there. We’ve done our fair share of questionable double-turns and lopsided leaps.

Yes, we’ve been there and done that with more ego-deflating teachers than we care to recall. Now we just want to groove at our own decelerated pace. We don’t want to be judged anymore, thank you. The days of tyrannical instructors disparaging us are thankfully behind us. Who needs that kind of abuse?

Doug praises us for simply showing up. “You made it!” he calls out, excitedly, even if you’re a few minutes late. He tells us we’re limber if we manage to bend down and touch our toes. He tells us we don’t have to get the routine right as long as we smile. He tells us we’re wonderful… amazing… beautiful. We tell him he’s delusional. Still, you can’t put a price tag on that sort of crazy unconditional love and non-stop encouragement. At this stage of the game, it’s just what the doctor ordered.

During Doug’s absence, I went a little bit nuts. I forgot just how far I’ve evolved. I forgot how secure I’d become. I forgot all my glorious resolutions. Above all, I forgot how much I disliked the delayed onslaught of muscle soreness.

What happened to that fancy affidavit I signed in my attorney’s office? The one that clearly stated the following in specific legal lingo:

I hereby swear to never endure another dance class where I’m forced to travel in a diagonal direction and, God forbid, solo across the floor, attempting double turns and leaps I was never good at to begin with, in an effort to save face, even though I risk permanently damaging various joints and soft body tissues, not to mention bruising my fragile psyche, all for the entertainment of others.

That affidavit went missing, along with my common sense. Luckily, I had a co-conspirator. I corralled Carrie, or maybe she corralled me, it’s all so humbling I’ve lost track, to search for a substitute dance class, an outlet where we could show off our impressive skills and put the other, less gifted dancers to shame. Talk about fun. We could hardly wait to get started.

Our first venture, billed on the schedule as Beginning Jazz, turned out to be false advertising. It was an advanced ballet class. Carrie and I were in way over our heads. The music started. The room started spinning. And that’s about all I can remember.

Strangely enough, Carrie and I were undeterred. We decided to wipe that class from our memory. We went straight into denial. It never happened. Next.

A few days later, I called Carrie. This one was definitely my fault. I take full responsibility for the impending shame.

“Let’s try another class!” I declared, secretly icing my hip flexors off-camera. “There’s a jazz class over at Hama’s.”

There was silence on the other end. “Carrie? Are you there?”

“Hama’s? I don’t know. He’s hard,” she informed me.

“He’s not the teacher. It’s someone else. Kristen. And it’s beginning!” I promised.

“Yeah, okay,” she said, reluctantly. “What time?”

I should have taken Carrie’s lack of enthusiasm as a warning sign. She’s a smart, intuitive career gal who’s organized big conventions in Vegas. She knows trouble before it even hits. Once again, Beginning Jazz was a sad misnomer. Beginning Jazz was yet another euphemism for Advanced Humiliation. Carrie and I tried so hard. We contorted ourselves into weird shapes. We dizzied ourselves across the floor. We did our pirouettes and leaps. We did our darndest to defy gravity. We tried to follow the instructor’s head-scratching lyrical style, as far removed from Fosse as dance can get. Overall, the experience was mortifying. Naturally, we went back a second time just to confirm our first impression.

“Never again,” I told Carrie. “I don’t know what I was trying to prove.” Wisely, she replied, “We wanted to prove we still had it.” “Apparently, we don’t,” I concluded, sadly.

Once again, I’ve revisited one of life’s great lessons, better said with a Southern accent: If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. Unless of course, a hip is involved.

Comments

Margo (anonymous) says...

Kudos to you for the dance classes! In my town, the "adult" dance classes offered tend to be filled with 20 and 30 somethings plus one OLD lady ballerina who still has all the moves. No middle-agers. And the teacher goes WAY too fast for beginners who need time to put more than two steps togeter.

July 21, 2008 at 9:30 a.m. ( | suggest removal )

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