Showing posts with label salsa. Show all posts
Showing posts with label salsa. Show all posts

1.4.18

Cuban roots

Salsa in Bamako is of the Cuban variety. I've found my way back to class and have been enjoying learning all the strange names for dance moves I already know and quite a few I don't know. It is nice to put a little structure on things however. 

For me, salsa began with Cuban style. Cuban salsa is danced in a circle, rather than the strict line of Puerto Rican salsa. Back then, I felt like a dervish whirling across the dance floor, full of joy and ecstasy. But I didn't always feel in control and I couldn't break down what my feet were doing. 

A few years studying Puerto Rican style gave me some discipline and helped me gain control. Now that I have a teacher who breaks down the steps, Cuban salsa is a lot less intimidating. My Malian teacher is a gentle young man, as so many Malians seem to be. He is quiet and sweet with a baby face (as so many faces seem to be lately. I am feeling my age here in Bamako.)    

He is a lot less demanding (though I can still hear Henri's voice telling me, head up, back straight, light hands....) While I miss the posture and the structure of Puerto Rican salsa- and Henri's strict teaching style- I am having fun feeling back to my roots. 

Taoule is a Muslim and he wears a traditional West African boubou every day, even for dancing. It is an odd mixture. This slight, mild mannered young guy in his long bazin dashiki and matching pants teaching me the Dile Que Si, the Enchufle and the Sombrero. Apparently he spent some years in France with his father, who is a dancer and musician himself. I have no idea how that turned into him studying salsa, but I guess there is time to uncover the story. 

Taoule is such a calm teacher, I am surprised when he breaks out with an advanced move. He's really great at meeting me at my level but every so often he sneaks in something fancy. It is so inconsistent with his manner that it never fails to make me smile. He understands pacing well and has been introducing more complicated steps at just the right time. I am left to wonder what his full out dancing might look like, while finding his reserve refreshing. He's not trying to impress me and I can't really tell if this is due to shyness or quiet confidence. I find it common in Malians- this gentleness that could be taken either way. It's comforting and welcoming. Friendly. I guess this is how they got their reputation. 

Mali keeps offering up strange juxtapositions of people and events. Learning Cuban salsa from a Muslim West African is certainly among the top. As I get closer to my roots, I keep finding there is more to uncover. 


21.2.17

Lessons to be learnt: yoga & dance therapy

My exercise routine has been whittled down to yoga and salsa, twice a week each. For the moment, I've had to let go of my gym routine (one day I will have arm muscles and be a bada#$ at kickboxing or capoeira- the dream is not dead, just postponed.)

My routine doesn't include traditional dance or drum, which is a major disappointment for me. Luckily there is a light at the end of this tunnel- I've got my eyes on Mali to restore me to my former self. In the meantime, there are lessons to be learned.

Both classes are the only ones I've found that have the potential to challenge me (except of course the beautiful people at Compagnie Mouye, who inexplicably broke my heart, though I don't think they know how deeply.)

My yoga teacher is Anne, from Ananda YOGA Abidjan. She has a great way of differentiating class- I guess yoga lends itself to that naturally, but she is knowledgeable and encouraging. A bonus is her home studio, which has an aura all its own. It's a quasi outside studio with open windows and a soft decor. Her yard has illuminated trees, which remind me of Kenya, and a dreamy porch. Sometimes we meet on the grass, and other times we meet in her garage-turned-studio but always the air is quietly enveloping. Even when we meet at the Bushman Cafe, the class is tranquil and the music enchanting.

I would describe myself as in the middle of my yoga journey (physically speaking)- there are several who can go further than me and plenty who can do less. It is the right mix of reminding myself I'm not half bad, but I have plenty of room to improve. As I often tell Mohamed, you never want to be the best on the field. You need to see the challenge and not let your ego get too comfortable. Humility is important.

There are days when my yoga workout leaves me in an emotional state near tears. Apparently, this isn't so unusual. I am still convincing myself of the mind-body connection, having long decided I could plow through anything if my mind were strong enough. In reality, a lot of what I am 'plowing through' gets stuck up in muscle memory. I am only half as strong as I think I am. It's what leaves me emotionally vulnerable after an intense hour and a half of yoga.

I'm only slightly interested in tracking what positions elicit what emotional response. A friend is doing her master's on a related topic which has increased my interest a bit, but I spend more time trying to figure out what I need to let go of and what's worth hanging onto.

Forever indulging in self-reflection, I know about the arts as therapy. I believe in the arts as therapy. But I admit to not experiencing much more than the visual arts- my go-to in times of crisis. Lately, I've begun to understand, truly feel the power of movement. That is to say, movement as therapy.  I don't mean therapy as in, I do it to prevent sadness or stave off depression (which is where I concentrate a lot of my effort.) But I mean therapy as in, I have a lot of issues to work out. (which I do, though the list is getting smaller.)

I've always understood I need to dance- and have been dancing since I was 6....or 4? I recognize that the worst times of my life- the teenage years- were the ones where I stopped dancing, and often regret. What if I'd kept dancing, wouldn't they have been so much more formative, in the positive sense? I have no doubt.

Just before I stopped dancing....

It's not so much that I stopped dancing, but I stopped publicly dancing. I stopped believing in myself as a dancer. Many a night I found my own beat in the privacy of my bedroom, but never, ever in public. It wasn't until my early twenties that I decided to tackle the problem- the fear- of public dancing. And so began my love affair with traditional African dance.

But for all of the twenty something years I have since been dancing, I am still only comfortable with a routine. A prescribed set of steps I can memorize and present. I harbor great issues with free form dancing or anything outside of a class, really. Or a performance that has been rehearsed and can be anticipated.

A class represents safety. I can make mistakes, there is a low level of judgement and I can stop at any time. A performance represents security, anticipation, no surprises. But there is something else going on in class, especially salsa class, which I have only just figured out.

My Friday nights are dedicated to a private class. This is a chance for me to receive instruction tailored to my individual level- and to dance with a master. Because I know I am leaving, I've asked for the class to be accelerated. I am somewhat new to the style, but not to dance as a discipline.

I resisted salsa for many years, unfortunate really, because, back in those aforementioned dance-less teenage years there were quite a few Latino hot-spots in my neighborhood, and if I'd been inclined, I could have been an accomplished salsa dancer by now (oh, the could haves and would haves...) One of the main reasons for my resistance was the machismo quality of salsa- or what I perceived as that anyway.

On occasion I am still troubled by the imbalance of power. It is hard for me to let the man lead, to surrender, in essence. Because I have issues, being a woman. If you are a woman, you might know something about what I am talking about.  I say it's not fair that the man gets to call the shots and can plan his moves in advance, while, as the woman, I have to be ready to respond to whatever direction I am given. This perspective is not helping my salsa.

Henri, my teacher, tells me that the move is always the same, a right turn is a right turn and cumbia is cumbia no matter what the man is deciding to do with his hands, or whether the position is open or closed. He's right of course, but he is a man. He gets to be in the lead. And he is probably coming from a much healthier perspective than I, I who have all of my issues buried deep in the memories of my muscles, just waiting to pour out at the most inopportune and inappropriate moments.

Salsa is a beautiful dance, an image of positive communication between the partners. But I am just now realizing that throwing someone like me in the mix can produce some unexpected results. I spent a lot of time trying to get over the fact that I am not in control. I was trying to "let go" and feel loose and free, and actually suspecting I had conquered that whole need-for-control aspect. (or mostly. Well, I was aware it existed, at any rate, and awareness is a great step, right?)

The dance was going well, and I felt beautiful, like those salsa dancers. Henri is an excellent teacher, providing just the right amount of critique and positive feedback to keep one encouraged, but motivated to improve. I felt like I might actually be able to learn this style, and who knows, maybe even go out for a salsa evening and meet some real people. When, WHAM! He didn't come flying into me- he is the professional after all- but it felt like that.

Our turns were a bit faster than I'd been practicing and he was really challenging me with varying the position between open and closed. When all of sudden he made the move from open to closed just a bit too fast and a hand too firm. I broke away feeling dizzy and slightly ill. I shook my head and waved my hands. What was that?

He was truly bewildered, poor unsuspecting guy, just trying to teach a dance class when the student has a traumatic reaction right there in the middle of it all. He looked at me with a question on his face.

"That was....that was..." I couldn't really get any words out. I wasn't sure what it was. "Too much," I finally sputtered. I'd thought at first that I was just responding to things moving too fast and not being able to keep up, a slight embarrassment about not being able to rise to the challenge he was presenting.

"That was great, no?" He seemed oblivious to all of my discomfort, happily. Something was going on with me, but I surely didn't want to advertise it there, in that space where I had been seeking refuge from my demons. I relived a few moments from my past, moments I thought I'd long put to rest and realized I was dealing with a bit more than an 'it's-not-fair-I-don't-get-to-chose-the-dance-moves' response to salsa. There was something inherently more complex going on there for me.

I am glad that dragon finally revealed itself, so I can slay it once and for all (or maybe that won't actually be possible?) but at least I can look him square in the eye and show him I am not afraid of dragons. Then I can get back to enjoying my dance. I am going to try and focus on the positive aspects of salsa and learn the lessons that need to be learnt. And embrace the person I am now. Nevermind the one I used to be. I can see there is a reason why my exercise routine has been whittled away to salsa and yoga. We need each other.

29.7.15

Lessons from the arts

I'm currently on nanny number 4, job number 3+ and salsa class number 2. I guess the theme in Abidjan is never give up. After several disappointing classes in salsa and my solo traditional classes, I put the search on for something satisfying.

There appear to be a variety of choices around the city and picking another one to try felt kind of like a random stab in the dark. I ended up at CNRTO (Centre National des Recherche sur Tradition Orale) which is a gem of a building in Cocody.

The name alone holds promise and despite my inital (unsuccessful) efforts to find out more details about the purpose of the center, a quick online search turned up this quote buried in a report from the ONU:



Cet institut dispose d’une documentation (transcription et traduction des enregistrements) sur les contes, les proverbes, la musique traditionnelle, le langage tambouriné, la parole des masques. On y trouve également des documents audiovisuels, des photos, des diaporamas, des films documentaires, des bandes magnétiques enregistrées et mises en fiches.

The 2 story building has a majestic entrance, grand columns and round staircases. The studio is upstairs and the walls are lined with doorways which open to allow the cool breezes to flow through. It's like dancing on a rooftop. A small balcony surrounds the meeting area and a veranda leads off to the front, creating another small space where dancers can meet, try out steps or just observe the class. 

There were about 20 people in attendance, and, remarkably, enough guys to create 10 equal couples. We changed partners often which gave me the experience of dancing with someone other than my love (something I really haven't done much of in the world of salsa.) 

The class was no beginner class and I was happily surprised to see I kept up with the constant addition of steps. I believe in dancing with as many different teachers as possible in order to maximize one's experience. However, my past experience with salsa has been limited to one teacher and so I've often wondered if I could really dance. Turns out I can. Well enough, anyway. To be certain, I am no professional but apparently my base is solid. 

Everything dance reminds me of Christian and because of that I found the class lacking that magnetic energy and draw he seems to effortlessly exude. In reality, the class was great. The last 10 minutes or so were given over to dancing 'comme tu veux' and this gave me a chance to do some freestyle- well, as the woman it gave me a chance to see if I could follow the lead. I do have a tendancy to lean towards control and in salsa, it just doesn't happen that way. I am forever working up to dancing impromptu and this class seems like it will give me a chance to get comfortable enough to go out for a dance evening. (Oh my childhood issues that get in the way of fun. Do we ever get over them?)

I am always amazed at the power of physical memory and sure enough, a few of the leads had me anticipating a movement that wasn't forthcoming. I've got most of Christian's routines down but in salsa dance, you follow the male (have I mentioned that? It's definitely something I am working on)  and so in a few cases my follow through was not quite what it was meant to be. In one horrifying moment, I found myself taking the lead and kind of forcing the hand of my partner, which we laughed about and I apologized profusely for. It's all in good fun, however and he wasn't as mortified as I. 

There are always good lessons to be learned in the world of art. My dance and music classes continue to provide metaphors for skills I could benefit from in my day to day. Trusting others to take the lead at times is one of them. On a contrary note, I have been taking drum classes- the doundoun- which serves as the base in African dance and drum. I have been in the middle of more than one class wondering how it is I came to this particular instrument. Really I've been infatuated with drumming since I was ten, that part is no surprise.The surprise is that in playing this instrument, one must maintain a steady, dependable tempo for the duration of the song. I am usually good for the first few minutes but inevitably when the djembe gets going I am distracted and falter. Another metaphor for life.

How often do the rhythms and dreams and actions of others distract me from my own path? I have been thinking lately that life in Abidjan is ok, it's good enough. It could be enjoyable in that calm and steadying way of family life and weekend barbecues. But I have never been really good at calm and steadying. I know passion and upheaval, change and turbulence. Longing and unfulfilled desire. Maybe it's time to change the story. Words from a beloved, and newly reunited, relative coming back to impact my current situation.

Although extenuating circumstances have taken the choice out of my decision to stay in Abidjan, I am thrilled to be in a place that honors the arts. Just when I am thinking it might be the French influence, I remember Nabih's history book and its outline of government in the village. One diagram showed the griot as having a prominent place just below the chief. To see the keeper of stories and histories and tradition given such an important position is comforting. Arts are healing. They are neccessary to the vibrancy and continued health of a people. 
It seems Abidjan has more than one lesson to offer and I, ever the willing student, am ready to learn.