Okay. You’re going to need to brace yourself here.  Are you sitting down?  Okay, good.

2011 was a great year.

Okay?  You’re back with us now?  You didn’t hit your head too hard on the concrete when you passed out did you?  I know, I know.  It’s a surprise, but it’s true.  For me, 2011 was a great year.  2011 was the year that my audiobook company finally started making money.  It was the year that I finally reached the kind of work/life balance that I’ve been aiming for since I entered the workforce.  It was the year that I met and talked with my neighbors, progressed at work, learned new skills, and resurrected long-neglected ones.  I made lots of music, gardened, crocheted, sewed, played video games, took photos, started writing my book, cooked a lot, began working out again, and finally started learning how to live within my means.  I got to welcome my beautiful new nephew into the world.  I broke up with Facebook. I became an (official) manager of other people for the first time in my career.  I spent time with my family, played with my dog, enjoyed the short (but beautiful) summer, lost 15 pounds, and gained it all back. 

I did a lot and experienced a lot this year, but what makes 2011 such a special year for me had less to do with what I did or didn’t do, and much more to do with the tectonic shift in my attitude about my own life.  For the first time in my life, I became comfortable with myself as a person.  I was able to finally see past my shortcomings and appreciate my strengths.  I stopped making and tracking my resolutions or goals on a monthly basis.  I (largely) stopped bemoaning the fact that my life hadn’t turned out the way I expected it to.  Rather than feeling lonely or left out, I began to find a great deal of comfort in my own solitude.  My life became far more peaceful than it has ever been before.

A large part of that shift is related to a choice I made a few months ago to stop caring about what other people thought of me or what I do.  I was able to speak my mind more freely, and not worry about how people saw me because of it.  I did the things that made me happy, regardless of how doing so made me look in the eyes of others.  I stopped “apologizing” for being the way that I am, and instead learned to appreciate myself.  I learned that I’m awesome, and I don’t freakin’ care if you don’t think so.  I discovered that I have never met anyone like me in my life, and that’s pretty cool.  I finally learned to appreciate my unique skillset and personality. 

If I may submit an example of this change:  2011 was one of the most musically prolific years for me since I retired from performing.  My skills are rusty, my voice certainly not in top shape.  Nevertheless, I stopped caring if people liked my music, and I posted it online anyway.  I endured a bit of (I believe) friendly ridicule from some co-workers over the content or quality of my music.  In the past, that would have torn me up, and I would have bemoaned the fact that I wasn’t any good.  This time, I actually managed to let it roll off my back, and I kept doing my thing anyway.  I was able to realize that not everyone will appreciate what I do, and I don’t care.

As this year quickly coasts to its close, I find myself a happier person.  Oh, don’t get me wrong.  I’m still sarcastic, a little bitter, and prone to fits of ranting.  That will probably never change.  But I’m learning to let it go much more quickly—to move on.  Perhaps it’s maturity.  Perhaps it is my comfortable isolation.  Perhaps it’s a fluke. And most importantly, perhaps it doesn’t matter.  I feel as though I made some important steps this year toward getting to know who I really am, and not who I thought I was or was told that I should be.  Not bad for a year’s work.

To all my friends, family, co-workers, and other, anonymous readers of my blog, I wish you a very Happy New Year.  May 2012 be as fulfilling for you as 2011 was for me.

 

As I’ve mentioned in earlier blog posts, I’ve been spending a fair bit of time writing a book over the last month or so. It’s a memoir covering the first thirty years of my life.  I’m not sure if I will ever release it to the public (it’s pretty stinky right now), but it’s been a good exercise in shutting off my internal editor and in sticking with a project.  I’m about 60K works into the book (about 240 pages) and I’m only about half of the way through what I want to talk about in the book.  I’m really enjoying the process of writing, though, and the further along I get, the most enjoyable the process itself becomes.

What I have found most valuable about writing this book, however, is a chance to analyze my life through the lens of time.  And when I manage to chronicle those aspects of my life that I find to be of great import—those experiences that I remember and hold on to both mentally and emotionally—I begin to see certain patterns emerging.  It really is a fascinating experience.  For better or for worse I have, over the years, formed a pretty stubborn mental picture of who I am as a person.  You only have to go back through my old blog posts over the last eight years to put together that mental picture of your own.  (Side note: I have been blogging for EIGHT. YEARS.  That’s insane.)

As I’ve started examining my formative experiences and memories as part of this memoir, though, I am beginning to see how deeply my self-painted portrait has been affected by one very specific character trait: my desperate desire to receive approval from everyone.  I can go chapter by chapter of my memoir, reading story after story, and I am constantly awestruck.  The life I have lived, which I would not consider a particularly happy one, would have been so much more enjoyable and fulfilling had I been strong enough or stable enough to follow my own road without worrying about others’ opinions of me.  So many of my emotional stumbling blocks were built by decades of trying to fit my own idea of someone else’s opinion of what I should be–an opinion that, had I been able to look at it objectively, wasn’t anything at all like what I thought it was.

But I’m getting a little too “meta” here.  An example:

I like to crochet.  I learned how to crochet when I was probably five or six years old—possibly earlier.  It was something I was really interested in.  My mom taught me—despite not really knowing that much about crocheting herself.  I had a large denim bag full of all different kinds of yarn that I would carry around with me.  I had crochet needles, and knitting needles, and weaving looms.  I started learning to sew when I was around seven years old. I really liked all of these things.  But as I grew older, I stopped doing them.  Not because I enjoyed them any less, but because I started going to school, spending time with other children, and realizing that crocheting wasn’t something that other boys did. 

My denim bag of yarn was lost to the ages.  We moved to Michigan when I was nine, and I didn’t pick up a skein of yarn for another 15 years.  I had allowed my concern over what other people would say about me to have so much control that it caused me to stop doing something I truly enjoyed.  It was so important that I was liked and popular that I would never allow myself to do something out of the ordinary like that.  Ironically, by not being myself and failing to ever really achieve my perfect mental image of what I should be, I managed to make myself even less popular, less liked.  I couldn’t be myself, and I couldn’t be anyone else, so I just was.

It wasn’t until I was many, many years older, and started working at the Hale Centre Theatre in West Valley that I picked up my crochet needle again.  In the long hours at rehearsal where you weren’t doing anything, but you needed to pay enough attention not to miss an entrance or cue, I would sit in the corner of the room and crochet squares for afghans that I was making to send to my family.  I felt safe doing that in rehearsals because, let’s face it—if there’s ever a group of people who understand what it’s like to bean outsider, it’s theater people.  Most of the boys are gay, most of the women are uber-pretty but super-smart (a very unpopular combination) and almost every single person is a little off-center in one way or another.  Nobody mocked my yarn and needle.  Instead, someone would come up to me and ask, “Are you knitting?” Or, “I didn’t know you could crochet.  What are you making?”  Nobody cared.  And a few of my family members got afghans out of it.

But I never took my crocheting out, for instance, when I was sitting on an airplane to fly home.  That wasn’t a safe environment. I didn’t want to have to deal with people who thought it was a little “fruity” that some guy was crocheting on the plane. Yeah, it’s an uncommon sight—for a man to be crocheting. But I knew that if I crocheted on a plane, someone would make fun of me for it.  I don’t know why that bothered me so much.  I don’t know why I cared so much that some person I didn’t know, and who I would never see again, would think less of me as a person because I happened to be crocheting on an airplane.  But I did.  So I wouldn’t.

In the last few months, I’ve been picking up a lot of my Home Ec. skills again.  I bought a sewing machine and made curtains and my own clothes.  I’ve been baking more than Sara Lee.  I’ve been decorating like I was trying out for a show on HGTV.  And tonight, I picked up a skein of yarn and a size G crochet needle and started working on another blanket.  And for a while, I thought, “Man, I’m glad I’m alone at home so I can do something I enjoy.”

Lightning bolt.

Why, in the name of all that’s good and holy, can’t I crochet wherever the hell I want to?  Why couldn’t I go sit in the crocheting group that meets at the local fabric store for two hours every Saturday if I want to?  Who cares if I was the only guy there?  Sure, it’s a little different, but so what?

And the funny thing is that, for as much worrying as I do about my “sissy” hobbies and how they make me look, they’re not that big of a deal.  I have a male co-worker in his late 50s who told his wife that I had been teaching myself how to sew again.  She mentioned that she really liked sewing, and he replied that he didn’t even know how to turn on a sewing machine, let alone make clothing.  She offered to show him how the machine worked, and he played around with it. The next day at work, he said that it was actually fun, and he enjoyed learning how to sew a little.

The head maintenance guy at my apartment complex was in the office when I took Luke the Dog™ over to get his daily cookie, and I mentioned that I was crocheting.  He’s a rough and tumble guy from Texas who does appliance repair and building maintenance for a living.  He drives a beat-up pickup truck.  And he asked me if I could show him the pattern that I was using, because he wanted to start crocheting again too.  Color me surprised.

I have another group of friends who create amazing costumes and props, and dress up to go to the comic, sci-fi, fantasy, and steam punk conventions.  They play dungeons and dragons, video games, take photos, make movies, and always have a great time.  And their hobbies are a little outside of the ordinary.  But they are some of the happiest, friendliest, and most fun people I’ve ever had the opportunity to spend time with.  And they don’t care at all.  They do what they love, and they’re happy.  I do what I love, and for most of my life, I’ve been embarrassed or ashamed, and I’ve been unhappy. 

I have spent such a huge portion of my life trying to be what the cultural zeitgeist says I should be as a thirty-something male.  First, I tried being a 30-something Mormon male.  Then I tried being a 30-something Gay male.  Well you know what?  I’m Matt.  I’m sick and tired of trying to be this idea of a person that has nothing to do with who I am.  I am tired of feeling like a failure because I fell short of an ideal that isn’t all that unique, special, or beautiful to begin with.  I’m tired of hiding my true personality, skills, talents, and abilities because somehow, along the way, I developed this crazy idea that the things I like to do aren’t socially acceptable or, more importantly, that it matters whether they are socially acceptable or not.

To quote the Broadway musical, La Cage Aux Folles:

It's my world that I want to take a little pride in,
My world, and it's not a place I have to hide in.
Life's not worth a damn,
'Til you can say, "Hey world, I am what I am."

I am what I am,
And what I am needs no excuses.

I will never like sports.  I like building things and carpentry, but I also like crocheting and sewing clothes.  I’m a balding redhead who still has dreams of playing the romantic role in a musical.  I don’t like alcohol.  I am attracted to men.  I can bake better than almost anyone you know.  I write and sing syrupy music that I really like.  I like being outside, but I really like sleeping in my bed.  I’m pale and a little chubby. I don’t like loud crowds or going out.  I want to learn how to shoot a gun.  I like staying at home alone or spending time with a small group of friends.  I don’t know how to fall in love in a healthy way.  I’m intellectually smart, and emotionally stupid.  I geek out over computer games like a 12-year-old.  I’m a nerd. I like to garden. I’m a good conversationalist.  I’m a pretty good writer. 

I am not a stereotype. And I’m not a failure because I’m not a stereotype.  And if the world doesn’t like it, the world can bite me.  I don’t care what you think anymore.

 

When I was in high school, I idolized this guy named Jesse.  Jesse was handsome, popular, and friends with everyone.  He was the ultimate social butterfly.  He would go from group to group with ease, fitting in easily with pretty much every clique or social stereotype you could image.  He was just an easygoing guy like that.

Jesse was in several shows with me in high school and so we spent a fair bit of time together, and I was always envious of his social abilities.  I had always wanted to be more social, be more popular, but I just couldn’t seem to figure out how to do it.  I studied Jesse’s social skills trying to glean his secrets—to no major effect, I’m afraid.  In fact, at one point, I got so fed up with how popular he was that in a late-night fit of emo angst, I wrote this truly awful poem called The Social Butterfly which, thankfully, has been lost to the annals of time.  Hopefully never to be recovered.   (I plan on going through some of my old things when I’m home for Christmas this year, so it should be interesting to see what I unearth).

Here’s the thing about me: I am just not a terribly social person.  Or, at least, I’m not a terribly social person in the way that many people consider being social.  I don’t like parties, large groups of people, clubs, gatherings, activities.  I like to spend my time either alone, or with a small group of close friends.  I’ve always been the kind of person who has a few extremely close friends rather than scads of acquaintances masquerading as friends.  I don’t make friends easily, and my reserved nature (okay, you can stop laughing now—I am reserved when I’m around people I don’t know) often causes me to give off the impression that I’m unhappy, unlikable, or judgmental…which, to be fair, I am sometimes.Being Social

And as much as I joke about not having friends on my blog, I do have friends.  But I don’t have many friends, and I have very, very few that are what I would consider close friends.  And the funny thing about my friends is that of all of my friends, I don’t think the great majority of them would like each other very much, because they’re so different.  I’ve got friends who play Dungeons and Dragons and dress up for conventions and Mormon friends who ride 4-wheelers and surf.  I’ve got gay friends who like to go shopping, and dog owner friends who like to stand out in the parking lot in the rain and watch their dog play.  And I’ve got theater friends who are simultaneously the life of and death to any social gathering.  (Seriously, have you ever been around a group of theater people?  It’s like witnessing a living, breathing train wreck.)

Getting all of these people in a room together would be a fascinating experiment in reaching the critical mass of social awkwardness.  Which is one of the reasons why I don’t host parties very often.

Since high school, my outlook on being social has changed quite a bit.  I was envious and desperate to be part of every social group, to be liked, and to feel as though I belonged everywhere.  Then I went to college and was inducted into the sewing circle of nutcases actors that made up my musical theatre program, and I cared less about fitting into every group—because I felt like I had found my group.  Then I went through a very difficult time where I found myself alone all the time, and I felt like I had become unmoored from society. 

Socially Awkward Penguin - invited to facebook event say maybe no p..What I’ve come to realize, however, is that as I get older, my desire to be part of the social scene has nearly qmdisappeared.  I was at work today, toward the end of the day, speaking with a couple of my co-workers.  One is a younger guy (23), the other, a woman older than me (43), and I am stuck dab in the middle (33).  The two of them are very social people.  They’re always going out to eat, and going to clubs, and hanging out with friends, and doing things.  They thrive on social interactions.  And they, as many people do, kept trying to convince me to go out with them.

And here’s the thing: I should.  I know I should.  But I don’t want to.  And the reason why I don’t want to has nothing to do with them.  I actually enjoy the company of both of them a lot.  But “going out” for me has become such an unappealing concept.  Going out means going to a loud bar or club where I only know the people I’m there with.  It means interacting with people I don’t know in a situation where I’m super-uncomfortable.  Going out is not fun for me—it’s an exercise in sheer terror.  I can put on a good face, but “going out” scares the hell out of me.  Which is why I don’t do it.

Over the last year, I have tried to force myself to be more social.  When people invite me to go do things, I always try to say “yes.”  And most of the time, I’m really glad I do.  I’ve had fun over at friends’ houses playing games, I’ve had fun going shopping or to the movies.  (Side note: if you ever want to “go out” with me and know I’ll have a good time, keep it to no more than four people, let’s go to a decent restaurant that’s quiet enough that we can talk, and then go to a movie at a nice theater.  I know it’s low-key, even boring, but it’s my kind of activity.)  But there are certain activities where I just know I’m going to be so miserable I can barely force myself to consider it, let alone actually do it.  Bars and Clubs, for instance.  Parades. Street Fairs.

And, of course, I don’t drink.  From what I understand, drinking is the universal social lubricant.  It’s too bad it impairs your judgment, costs a fortune, and tastes like licking an elephant’s ass crack.  (I assume.  I mean, I’ve never tasted alcohol. *rim shot*)

I used to feel like being alone was the worst thing in the world.  I suppose it comes from hearing in church that, “Man was not meant to be alone.”  Or it came from watching other young people experiencing sociality (did I use that word correctly?) and having a great time.  But when I do social activities, I don’t often have a great time.  I endure—and sometimes not even that.  Also, I have this paranoid sense that when I do force myself to participate in social situations, the people who invite me always question why they did, because I get really quiet and withdraw, and don’t delve in and take part.

I like my friends, and I like spending time with them.  I like doing some social things. But I really do like being on my own quite a bit too.  I like being able to do what I want, when I want it.  I like my projects and hobbies.  I like accomplishing things.  Now, what I really need to do is to find someone who wants to bake with me, or go on a photo walk, or work in the recording studio, or pay for me to refurnish my apartment.  Because then I could be somewhat social and not feel like I have been rode hard and put away wet* when it’s all over.

*This is not a euphemism.  Get your mind out of the gutter. Also, if it were a euphemism, being rode hard and put away wet would be a good thing. Which it’s not…you know what?  I’m just going to end this blog post now before I get myself into any more trouble.

 

In case you were one of the 3,493 people who wished me happy birthday on Facebook, via email, or over the phone, I did, in fact, have my birthday this week.  On Thursday.

It started off with the realization that on my next birthday, my IQ, Waist Size, and Age will all be the same number.

*rim shot*

But seriously, this year’s birthday was not so much fun, I have to say.  I went to work for the first half of the day.  I had originally planned to take the whole day off and have some fun.  But mandatory work meetings cropped up, so I rolled into the office and did my due diligence.  (I’m such a dedicated employee…)

At lunch time, I took off for the day, and went to putter around in my garden for a little while.  I did a tiny little bit of weeding, and watered the place, then I harvested another plastic grocery bag full of lettuce.  I was bringing the salad to a little dinner gathering with some friends on Friday, and I wasn’t going to have time to harvest it then, so I had to get it the day before.  Then I took a nap, woke up, took Luke for his walk, and then got ready for my big birthday evening.

A month ago, I had purchased tickets for the first night of the new stage version of Disney’s Aladdin.  They’re doing an out-of-town tryout to see if it’s something they’d like to workshop for Broadway.  Plus, I had a friend from college who had come out to Seattle to be in the show, so I wanted to go and support her.  I was going with another friend of mine who used to be my next-door neighbor.  He was going to get out of work at 6:30, then we were going to drive into the city to get dinner and see the show.

Well, his assistant over-booked him with clients, so he wasn’t able to get to my place to pick me up until about 7:15.  At that point, we had to rush to get into the city, park, and pick up the tickets before the 8PM curtain.  So, we ended up not getting any dinner.

I realize I may hurt some feelings with what I’m about to write next, but the show was really bad.  Really bad.  First the good, though.  The cast had some of the best voices I’ve heard on stage in a long time.  Everyone (with one major exception) sang quite well.  The guy who played the genie was amazing.  He saved the show.  The production values and lighting were spectacular.  The big problem was the script.  Apparently, they were still doing rewrites up until the day of the show.  And they still REALLY don’t have it. 

I understand that when you adapt a movie to the stage, you have to make some changes.  I totally get it, and I don’t begrudge them the changes.  However, they changed the basic personalities of the major characters.  Instead of being a smart-alec street rat who does, in fact, break the law on purpose, they turned the new Aladdin into this after-school special who just wants to do good because he promised his mom  he would before she died.  (I mean, really.)  Jafar became this poncey, effeminate joker who didn’t provide any menace at all.  (There was no real, scary bad guy).  Jasmine was a spoiled brat with no real, redeeming qualities. And, most painfully, instead of being palled up with a monkey, Aladdin was a member of a band of street musicians, who served as a sort of Greek chorus.  That, in and of itself, isn’t a bad thing, necessarily, but the other three members of the “band” completely pulled you out of the story.  The writers went the cheap direction, bringing in all sorts of modern references when the chorus broke the 4th wall.  An typical example:

Band Mate #1: So, Aladdin was in trouble.  Meanwhile, back at the ranch…
Band Mate #2: What are you talking about?  There’s no ranch here?
Band Mate #3: I’ve got some Hidden Valley (pulls out a bottle of Hidden Valley Ranch).

What made Aladdin the movie so effective was that it was immersive.  The characters grew and changed. Even though the actual scenario was fantastic, the character’s reactions to it were based in reality and grounded thoroughly.  The soul of the film was completely massacred by the script for the stage version.  And the acting style was SO OVER THE TOP.  With the exception of the genie, there was no subtlety at all.  It was like watching a theme-park show version of Aladdin.  And I didn’t for one moment believe the relationship between Jasmine and Aladdin.  Watching them “fall in love” was like watching a 14-year-old gay boy dancing with a girl for the first time at a church dance.  (And trust me, I know what that looks like.)

I would love to see Aladdin make it to Broadway, but NOT this version of Aladdin.  It was painful.  Apologies to my friend who was in the show.  I wish I could be more complementary about the whole thing.  I will say that the cast was quite good (except for Jasmine) and, if the script was re-written, I really think the show could do well.

In any case, we finished the show, and then went to look for a place to eat, and everything was closed.  Even Denny’s.  AND IHOP.  I thought those restaurants never closed.  So, my big birthday dinner was eaten in truck in the parking lot of Wendy’s.  And I’m thankful to my friend who took me there, but it was just a little disappointing.

The biggest problem was that, for the first time in a long, long time, I really fell into a birthday pity party.  I’ve been actively trying not to evaluate my life too much lately.  I’m trying to get out of my head and just enjoy my life as it is.  And I’ve been relatively successful.  It’s the reason why the number of blog posts I write has dwindled so significantly.  Without complaining about my loneliness or lack of a partner, I don’t have a lot to talk about.  But after the show, I got into one of those ever-dangerous contemplative mood pockets. 

This is the first big professional show that I’ve seen since I retired from performing.  It was also the first time that the desire to quit my job and go back to performing hit me so hard.  It was a real, physical pain in my chest.  I spent half of the intermission nearly hyperventilating when I thought that I would have to back to work and sit in that little office in front of a computer all day long, every day for the rest of my life.  I wanted nothing more than to go back to my hotel room, stay up until 2AM, sleep in until 10 or 11, go to the gym, then go back to the theater at 5:00 for another show and repeat it for the next two months before moving somewhere else and starting the whole process over again. 

Then, after I got home, I fell into the “I’m So Lonely” hole of which I seem to be constantly skirting the edges.  My mind spiraled into this black hole of thought that usually goes something like this:

* I’m so lonely.  I need to find someone to share my life with
* I don’t know how to even go about finding someone.  It’s a skill I never learned
* Even if I did know, it wouldn’t matter, because I am so fat and ugly
* I’m going to be fat and ugly forever, which means I’ll never find anyone
* And because I’ll never find anyone, I’ll never learn how to find someone
* Etc., etc., etc.

Look: I’m not saying its logical.  Or even correct.  And I’m certainly not saying it’s a healthy train of thought.  But it is the train of though to which I seem to have purchased a season pass.  It was particularly bad that night, however, because I was realizing that, at the age of 33, there are so many things I have never experienced.  And, the older I get, the less and less likely it is that I will ever get a chance to experience them.  I was freaking out, because in a lot of ways, I’m still an emotional adolescent. 

And then, to wrap it all up, Luke the dog woke me up at 5AM on Friday morning to run outside, eat grass, and puke.  It was the perfect end to the perfect day, pretty much all the way around.

The crankiness of the day has mostly passed, and I used my wallowing as an opportunity to develop a bit of a game-plan for dealing with some of the unhappiness that engulfed me on Thursday.  I’m re-initiating my weight-loss/healthy eating/exercise regimen, since that’s one area that I actually can control.  And next year, I’m going to do a better job of planning my birthday.  Unless someone else wants to volunteer, in which case, just make sure I don’t get any alone time with my thoughts.

“Lefew I’m afraid I’ve been thinking.”
”A dangerous pasttime”
”I know.”

 

I know.  It’s been too long since I last wrote.  I know this because I couldn’t remember what I wrote about last time, so I had to go to my blog website to remind myself.  It’s a sign that I’m going too long between entries.  But, over the last several months, I’ve come to a not-entirely-startling conclusion: I’m one boring guy.  I mean, seriously.  Even I make me yawn.  Ever since I settled down into the life of a middle-aged spinster, not much happens in my life that is worth displaying, splay-legged, across the internet.  My life is no longer Lady Marmalade. Gitchy gitchy ya ya blah blah is more like it.

I just don’t have very much going on in my life these days that is different than it was a week ago, or a month ago, or even a year ago.  My daily routine doesn’t change.  Neither has the weather, come to think of it.  I weigh a little bit more, have a little bit less money.  None of my vices result in crazy 140 mph drives of a windy canyon guard rail with a blood alcohol level of .196.  In fact, my two main vices results in a little more weight and a little less money. 

When your days are all pretty much the same, it’s difficult to come up with something worth discussing on a public forum.  Granted, not that a lack of anything interesting has kept me from posting on my blog before, but one can only complain about one’s live so much before people stop reading your blog and start perusing Damn You Autocorrect instead.

IMG_20110622_193436

The one little bright ray of metaphorical sunshine in my life, especially considering the lack of real sunshine in my life, is my garden.  In the photo above, my plot of land lies between the rows of marigolds on each side, and all the way back to those little white plastic thingies all the way in the back.  There’s also about 2 feet cut off the front of the garden because I couldn’t fit it into the shot with my crappy cell phone camera.  (If this rain ever stops, I want to take my real camera out to the garden and get some good shots.)

My original garden plan has been altered by slugs, rabbits, deer, moles, voles, and my uncontrollable desire to try growing pretty much anything and everything.  Currently growing or pending growth (just planted as seed)are the following: Parsley, Cilantro, Thyme, Chives, Carrots (to replace the Radishes), Kohlrabi, Butter Lettuce, Shelling Peas, Show Peas, Fingerling Potatoes, Leeks, String Beans, Drying Beans, Red Sail Lettuce, Peppers (hot and sweet), Eggplant, Tomatoes, Watermelon, Zucchini, Cucumber, Spaghetti Squash, and Corn.

In the last several weeks, I have truly come to believe that most of us have lost a very primal and important part of ourselves by becoming so removed from growing our own food and, perhaps more importantly, actually having to put physical effort into doing so.  In my day job, I sit behind a desk and often feel impotent to influence or improve some of the problems that I deal with on a daily basis as part of my job.  I star at a computer screen for 8-10 hours a day completely removed from “reality.”  Yeah, it pays the bills, but it’s not real.  At the end of the day, it’s hard to point to any one thing and say, “I did that.  That was me.”

It’s one of the reasons I admire people who create things.  My friend Bill, besides being a great photographer, is an amazing builder of props and costumes.  (As is his wife, Brittany.)  Recently, Bill built this prop of a weapon from World of Warcraft entirely from scratch.

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(Photo by Bill Doran.  You can read the making-of post here.)

Now granted, giant, life-sized replicas of weapons from a fantasy-based computer role-playing game may not be your thing, but you can’t argue that being able to build something like this from nothing is pretty darn impressive. 

That’s how I’ve come to feel about my garden.  I’ve put a LOT of work into this 400 square feet of land over the last two months.  And I’ve really enjoyed almost every part of it.  (I still loathe weeding, mom.  So getting older still didn’t help me mature into loving that.)  And when I’m done, I feel like I’ve accomplished something.  I find that after a long day of mental taxation, I can’t turn off my brain.  Working in the garden has become almost like meditation for me.  I get to sweat a little bit, spend time outdoors, get re-connected with the dirt (because we boys never grow out of playing in the mud), and leave the launch schedules, software bugs, and status reports behind.

And, I have something real to show for it!  Last Sunday, I harvested three gallon-sized bags full of beautiful lettuce from my garden.  I gave two bags of it away, and just finished the third bag tonight.  I’ve eaten more vegetables in the last week than I have in the previous three months put together…unless you consider French fries a vegetable.  Did you know that lettuce actually has a flavor if you eat it shortly after it’s picked?  I didn’t.  But it does.  It doesn’t just taste like crunchy water, but it actually tastes like something.  It’s hard to describe, so I’ll give into a circular definition and say that it tastes like lettuce.

imageI think the real problem is, however, that I was simply born into the wrong time period.  I should have been born in the time where I could be a gentleman farmer.  I could hire skads of servants to work the fields for me while I meandered through the rows of vegetables writing poetry in my head, designing the new addition to my mansion, and developing new strains of plants that two hundred years later, suburban gardeners would pay through the nose for because they were now “heirlooms.”  Besides, I don’t care what anyone says, I’d look smashing in knee-high stockings and knickers.  I have fantastic calves.

Instead, however, I’ll have to put aside my fantasy of being a gentleman farmer and instead make do with being a gardening program manager.  It doesn’t have the same ring or romance, but it does have So You Think You Can Dance and pizza delivery.  It’s a trade-off.  And perhaps if I ask nicely, Bill will let me borrow his warglaive when it comes time to harvest my garden in the fall…

 

From about two days after I acquired Luke the Dog, I realized that I had a very special animal on my hands.  Or rather, I realized for perhaps the first time how special dogs could be.  I had a couple of cats growing up that I loved (I still love cats, too), but we never had a dog.  My mom wasn’t interested in having a dog mainly because of the mess—not a judgment, just a statement (Hi, mom!).

Through our first few months together, my opinion of my dog was only reinforced.  He was flying through his training courses.  He was super friendly.  He was just a great, great dog.  And I started looking around for ways to get him more engaged.  I very quickly stumbled across the Delta Society, an organization that helps to train and evaluate dogs for therapy work.  Luke was too young, and a little too energetic to get started on therapy work right away.  Also, you have to have known or lived with your animal for a minimum of six months before you can be evaluated.  But I knew that one day he’d be a great therapy animal.

Then life intervened.  My carefully constructed world in Utah disintegrated in pretty short order.  I moved to Seattle.  I changed careers.  I went back to school.  I changed jobs again.  I got busy and distracted, and spent some time dealing with a some pretty major personal demons.  And while I never forgot the therapy animal training, it had just been de-prioritized.  Along the way, I met a wonderful neighbor, a woman named Carol, who has the sweetest little beagle named Riley.  And Riley, as it turns out, is a registered Delta Society therapy animal.

Luke loves Carol and Riley.  It has a lot to do with the fact that Carol always has treats.  He can be a block away and hear, smell, or see Carol and Riley, and he will pull me all the way down the road behind him like he was a husky and I the dogsled.  And Carol loves Luke.  Time and time again she urged me to get Luke enrolled in therapy dog training.  He’d be great at it.  He’d love it.  I’d love it.

So, this March, when I noticed in the City of Redmond community activity catalog that there was going to be a Therapy Dog training course, I was excited.  I had changed jobs, I had a bit more free time, I was looking for some way to provide some service.  It was great timing.  So, I sent in my $200 and I enrolled in class.

The classes were really fun.  Every Thursday, I’d leave work early, run home, throw Luke in the car, and drive to Healing Paws for training.  It was very different than many of the other training classes that I’ve attended, because the focus was on getting the animals and handlers trained for a very specific task—getting through the evaluation.  All our previous training experience had been on general obedience and basic tricks.  And Luke was a superstar at that.  In this training, though, the dogs weren’t even allowed to meet each other and interact.  The training was rigorous, but enjoyable, and I got to spend time with Luke.

Luke did well.  With the exception of a couple of minor tasks, he was a superstar.  There was one task, in particular, with which he struggled, though.  At one point in the evaluation, the handler must put the dog in a sit/stay, then walk back from the dog 10 feet.  At that point, the evaluator would come up to the dog and pet it, and the dog would have to stay.  Then, the handler would call the dog to come, and the dog would leave the petting, and return to the handler.  Luke was usually so excited about getting petted that he would stand up and rush over to the evaluator.  Or, when he was being petted, he would often fail to heed my “come” command because he was enjoying it so much.

The other area in which he struggled was in leaving toys/food/unknown items alone when we walked by them.  This had always been a difficulty of his, but we were working on it, and he was making very, very good progress.  To help him along, I taught him a whole new command (using “not now” instead of the far more common “leave it.”)

In all, throughout the process, my confidence grew.  Luke was getting back up to speed on his obedience training, as was I, and I was certain that pretty soon, he and I were going to be able to start visiting nursing home or hospices to provide a little distraction and comfort to the residents and patients.  As my confidence grew, though, so did a couple of niggling little doubts that had taken hold in the back of my mind, even before we started taking the class.  First, Luke, while a very sweet dog, isn’t really a cuddler or a snuggler.  He likes people, but generally, only specific people that he knows or strangers in a familiar environment like our apartment complex.  He can be a bit insecure and, when he’s feeling crowded, can be a little snippy.  And, of course, I always knew that he doesn’t really feel comfortable around most kids, which is why I was planning on visiting nursing homes and hospice situations.  But, I was certain that, because our training was going so well, Luke was overcoming some of his insecurities.

On Thursday night, after eight weeks of class, it was time for our Mock Evaluation, which is the final preparation before the real evaluation a week thereafter.  We were the first team to go.  I was calm and relaxed, sure we were going to do fine.  The mock evaluation is supposed to be a role play of what you might experience at a real site visit.  So, we began by greeting the “site administrator” and doing introductions.  Then she walked around behind the dog (some dogs don’t like people behind them), then greeted him.  It went very well.

Next, we did the “out for a walk" portion, where I had to prove that he could walk next to me, stopping when I did.  It went well.  We practiced “walking through a crowd” and “not reacting to a surprising noise” and “being bumped into by a stranger.”  Luke was doing a great job.  My confidence was increasing.  Then we got to the trouble area: the sit/stay exercise I described above.  He did it perfectly.  Things were going really, really well.

Then we came to the “being groomed and inspected portion.”  The evaluator needs to pet him on the head, look in his ears, check his teeth, manipulate his paws, legs, and tail, and then, give him a restrictive hug.  We had never practiced this before.  As soon as she started manipulating his paws, I could feel him tense up immediately.  He started leaning into me, which was his indication that he wasn’t very happy with what was going on.  When she knelt down to give him a hug, he rumbled in his throat a little: A precursor to a growl.  The evaluator told me that, had this happened in the real evaluation, the evaluation would be stopped immediately and we would be marked as “not ready.”  I was officially rattled.

We proceeded on to the next couple of tasks, which he did pretty well, and then we got to the exercise in which Luke would be surrounded by a group of four different people, all petting him at the same time.  He was not having it.  He started baring his teeth and growling full-out at this point.  I called an immediate end to the mock evaluation right then and there.  There was no question: he had failed miserably.  The instructor said that Luke certainly had “the potential” to do therapy work, and that I should work with him over the next week.  Luke and I were the first group to go through the mock evaluation, so I had to sit there for the next two and a half hours while six of the seven remaining dogs breezed through the evaluation.  (One other dog, the one that went right after me, had been problematic throughout the whole process, so his lack of success was unsurprising.)

I was devastated.  What I had seen in that mock evaluation was new to the trainer and my classmates, but not to me.  Luke has a history of being insecure and uncomfortable in social situations.  He’s not, as I had always known, a dog who needs to be smothered with attention, and often prefers to be on his own.  I thought, because the training was going so well, and it had been so long since we had any incidents of him acting so uncomfortable, he was improving.  But, in one fell swoop, I knew that I had just witnessed confirmation that, despite how much I wanted it, Luke was not interested in being a therapy animal.  At all. 

I had in my mind this idea of how great it was going to be for Luke and I to go to the neighborhood nursing homes and senior centers and visit with folks—making them feel better, making me feel better, and allowing Luke and I to spend so much more time together doing something constructive.  I saw it all go up in smoke in that 15-minute period of time.  I was disappointed in Luke, upset that he wasn’t the dog I wanted him to be.  I was mad at myself for not doing a better job of socializing him when he was younger and impressionable, choosing instead to be socially isolated. I was mad I had spent $250 in class and material fees, and another $400 in vet bills to get him checked out and vaccinated for these classes.

After class, I spoke with the instructor and told her that we wouldn’t be taking part in the evaluation the following week.  Nearly in tears, I explained that I was afraid that Luke just wasn’t interested in doing this—and certainly not as much as I was.  I thanked her for the class, which I truly loved, and offered some of my non-canine expertise with future classes (a volunteer for the evaluations, video/audio expertise, etc.)  And then I drove home.

I have experienced a lot of disappointment in my life.  I think that’s true of most people.  I was pretty disappointed on our drive back.  As were on the way back though, Luke, who was standing in the back seat of the car, stood right behind me and rested his chin on my shoulder.  It was almost like he was telling me that he was sorry for disappointing me.  Of course, my heart melted.  I had been trying so hard to make Luke into what I wanted him to be, instead of trying to figure out who he was.  Yeah, I’m still really disappointed we won’t get to do therapy work, but that doesn’t mean I love him any less.

I have to imagine that I got a glimpse of what my parents must have felt when I told them that I was gay.  Luke is just a dog, but I had tried to map out his life for him because I love my dog.  I thought for sure that it would make him so happy if he could just get over his fear.  But, it turns out that he’s just not a therapy animal, and no amount of pushing or prodding is going to change that.  But, Luke is a dog.  He’s not a child.  I didn’t give birth to him.  You can’t legally put children in cages when they misbehave.

I know, beyond doubt, that my parents had at least a basic roadmap for my life planned out.  School.  Mission.  College.  Marriage.  Job.  Kids.  Church Callings. Grandkids. Retirement.  The circle of life.  And I know, also beyond doubt, that they had this roadmap not because they were controlling, but because they loved me.  And also, because that’s just part of the plan.  But, that’s not what was in store for me.  And to their credit, they have continued to love me, as all good parents should.  (Seriously, parents who throw their kids out for announcing they are gay should be rounded up and thrown in jail. In Iran.)

So, Luke won’t be a therapy dog.  He’s probably never going to love being around kids (unless I ever have a child, and he can get acclimated to it.)  He’ll still be his happy-go-lucky self, he’ll love all the neighbors, worship anyone who will give him a treat, and go out of his way to play with every single dog within a 100-mile radius.  And that’s okay.  I don’t need a working animal.  It would have been nice, but it’s not the end of the world.  I still love my dog, I’m just a little disappointed.

 

Before I begin this blog, I would like to let you know that the space bar on my laptop keyboard makes a very annoying squeaking sound each time it is depressed.  I type at nearly 90 words a  minute, which ads up to a lot of spaces, very quicklky.  At the moment, my typing sounds a bit like someone is beating a baby bird with an epileptic rat with ADHD.  So, if at some point during the course of this blog post, all of the spaces disappear from my writing, it’s because I simply couldn’t take the incessant squeaking. 

Last night, I was meandering around the interwebs, as I am wont to do, and I came across the Twitter account of a co-worker of mine who I generally like, although I may not always agree with his methods.  I clicked onto his feed to see if he ever said anything interesting enough on his Twitter feed to warrant me following him.  Turns out that he did say something pretty interesting in his Twitter feed. About me. That wasn’t so much with the complementary.

At the time, I was a little taken aback.  I don’t profess to the best in the world at my job.  But I am pretty good at what I do…and considering how inexperienced I am, I dang good at what I do.  Moreover, I had gone out of my way to work on a project for this person that isn’t really my responsibility, as I had some available cycles and wanted to help out where I could.  And then I had my job performance called “terrible” in thanks.

My dad has a saying.  “You’ve got to care to get angry.”  And, in reality, I don’t care that much.  There would have been a time in my life where coming across something like this would have tortured me for days or weeks (or months or years, knowing my inability to just LET. THINGS. GO.)  But honestly, in this particular instance, I just didn’t care.  It did get me thinking, though, about civility.

I miss it. Or, at least, I miss the idea in my head about what civility used to be.  In the past in my mind, civility is a little like The Truman Show. People appeared to be happy and pleasant, even though it may not have always been the case.  But at least they made the effort.  But it seems like people don’t even bother making the effort anymore.

It used to be that people would be civil in their day-to-day interactions with other people, and would only don their asshats when they wrote letters to the editor or badmouthed someone in private.  But that’s not the case anymore.  It seems like the whole concept of civility is becoming more and more foreign.  Television “comedies” have stopped caring about being funny, and instead are just trying to offend everyone and everything they can, mistakenly believing that offensive = funny.  (Seth McFarlane, I’m talking to you.  Family Guy  used to be really, really funny.  Then you stopped worrying about being funny and started focusing on offending as many people as possible.)  And reality television murdered civility, threw it in the trunk of its car, and dumped the body in the middle of an elementary school playground.

The workplace seems to be suffering too.  It seems like there’s just no room for being civil with colleagues in the work environment.  It was particularly bad at my last job where, when you’d walk out of a meeting, you felt as though you needed to go the hospital and get bandaged up.  People were just brutal and belittling to each other all. the. time.

There is a whole generation of people for whom civility has become a completely foreign concept. They are incapable of disagreeing peacefully.  They post nothing but vitriolic hatred and bile on every article, blog post, or message board.  And I’m even more upset that I fall into that trap far too often myself.  I generally try to be polite, even when I disagree, because I hate conflict.  It makes me feel really uncomfortable.  But even I slip up.

In fact, I realized about an hour or so after seeing the Tweet that kicked off this minor self-reflection I had done the exact same thing nearly three years ago.  I had a co-worker much, much, much my junior who had decided that she was responsible for managing me, even though that wasn’t part of her responsibility or job description.  I posted some snot-nosed comment on Twitter to the effect of, “To my co-workers who obviously wants my job.  Back off.  I’ve got a boss already, thanks.”

She found the Tweet, and confronted me about it.  I deleted the Tweet and apologized, but the damage was done.  There remained a lot of tension between us until the day I left the company, mainly because a) her behavior didn’t change, and b) I continued to complain about her to basically anyone who would listen until the day I left.  And it all started because of that stupid little Tweet.

So my question is this:  I like to be civil, but I am also a very judgmental person who has a difficult time keeping my internal monologue…well…internal.  How do you do it?  How do you maintain civility when people drive you bat-crap crazy?  Because I know how to fake civility, but I have a really hard time “feeling” civil.

Or maybe it has less to be with me being civil, and more to do with me just being a big ole’ bitch.

 

Today has been an exhausting day.  I’m so tired I can barely site up straight in my chair (no gay jokes, please) and type this blog post.  Even after two naps today, I am complete exhausted.

And it’s fantastic.

The reason why I am so pooped is because I spent a great majority of my day outdoors today puttering in my new garden.  And of course, by puttering, I mean beating the living daylights out of said garden with a hoe. (Insert joke about dead hookers in the trunk of my car. Dead hooker jokes practically write themselves.)  After several hours of work on my part, and a nice man with a roto-tiller, my garden is in really wonderful shape.  I will start planting tomorrow.

After the third hour of beating my hoe (*rim shot*), I had a realization.  One of those life-changing realizations. Or, you know, life changing until I decide that it’s time for me to become a master carpenter or Chinese acupuncturist or something stupid like that.  Anyway, my realization was this, and I apologize in advance for waxing rhapsodic or spouting an inordinate amount of my infamous purple prose:

The only way I can ever enjoy exercise is when it accomplishes some purpose above and beyond the simple purpose of exercising. 

Since I quit performing five years ago (Really?  That long?) I have struggled with my weight.  I’ve not gotten morbidly obese or anything, but I have put on quite a bit of weight.  I sit on my butt all day long at work, I never exercise, and I eat like a pig.  And, since I don’t drink, smoke, do drugs, sleep around like a $5 hooker, or spend money I don’t have (anymore), the only major vice I have left is food.  So, I think we all know I’m not going to be giving up on food anytime in the near future. So, if I want to maintain or lose weight, I have to exercise.

The problem is that I hate exercising.  Hate it.  I hate lifting weights, running, using the elliptical machine, taking classes.  Hell, half the time, I hate walking my dog.  And I love my dog.  I just like being sedentary.  And it wasn’t until today that I realized why that is.  Well, I mean other than my deep-seeded laziness. 

The problem is that I can’t stand exercising when the purpose of the exercise is to exercise.  It’s. So. Boring.  There are so many things that I want to do in my free time, and starting at my fat, balding head bounce up and down in the mirror behind the control panel of my treadmill is not how I want to spend it.  30 minutes listening to an audiobook or podcast on the elliptical machine, and I feel like I have just wasted a perfectly good 30 minutes where I could have been doing something productive, like watching cute cate videos on YouTube.  When I exercise, I don’t feel good.  I don’t get an endorphin rush.  I just feel tired and gross.  And then I usually get an upper respiratory infection and have to stop exercising.  And the effects of exercise are not even remotely immediate enough to be motivating in any way shape or form.

But I got a boatload of exercise today.  But I wasn’t exercising.  I was working in my garden.  I was accomplishing something.  And let me tell you…it was exercise.  By the time I was done, my legs were shaking, I was breathing hard, and I was covered in sweat.  (Man…that sounds so bad.  Don’t take that last sentence out of context, please.  Thanks.)  And when I finished and I turned around, I could see the fruit of my labors.  There was something to show for it.  Plus, I got to spend a lot of time outside and in the sun, enjoying the weather, meeting new people, and having a grand old time. 

So after a day like today, I’m exhausted, but I don’t just feel gross and tired.  I feel gross, tired, and fulfilled.  So, I guess that this is how I’m going to get my exercise this year.  I’ll be planting the first batch of veggies tomorrow, and I’m going to try to remember to take some pictures of my plot.  Because, let’s be honest…nothing is more exciting than pictures of an empty field of dirt.

 

A month or two before Christmas, I asked for some help from you, my loyal blog readers, for a little Christmas Project I wanted to put together.  You can read the full story here but the short version of the story is that there is a young, single mother in my apartment complex with a few young children who (I got the feeling) was struggling with things.  The oldest daughter was a bit of an outcast, and had let slip that the family was in rough shape financially.  Thanks to some very generous help from folks who read the blog, I was able to put together a little financial gift which was left anonymously.

Since that time, I have learned several things about the young family that have struck me pretty deeply, and I wanted to share them with the people who helped me out in my little project.

Perhaps most significant, not to mention heart-rending, is that the oldest girl has brain cancer.  I don't know how long she's been fighting it, but toward the end of the year, it took a turn for the worse.  She has been going through pretty difficult treatments, and has lost of all her hair from the radiation.  I don't know a lot of the details, but at the age of 9, at in the last couple of months, she has lost nearly all her eyesight due either to the tumors in her brain or the treatment to remove them.  She's been in and out of Children's Hospital in Seattle, and right now, the prognosis isn't looking so great.  I don't ever see her walking around outside anymore. She isn't able to go to school. Things are in a bad way.

For a large chunk of 2010, the mother had been unemployed.  In the middle of January, she landed a job as a receptionist.  I have heard that she is now working two jobs to make ends meet, but it's difficult because she has to be there to take care of her oldest daughter, not to mention the other two kids, one of whom isn't old enough to go to school yet.  The mother, who is a very sweet lady, broke down in tears recently in the complex office because of the weight of everything she's trying to deal with.  The more I get to know this woman, the more amazed I am at her strength and determination.

I didn't know any of this stuff when I selected this family for my little project.  And I didn't know it when I handed off the small sum that we managed to put together.  I only learned about some of it earlier today, and it's been haunting me (in both a good and bad way) all day long.  

I am so grateful to those of you who helped me with this.  I had no idea what all the family was going through when this all happened.  I don't know how they felt about what was left for them.  But I have to believe that it came as a help at a very difficult time.  

I am so thankful that I have been so blessed to know so many generous people in my lifetime, and that you were willing to step up and help me help someone you've never met.  I'm glad that I received the prompting to do this project, and you can rest assured that it will continue on in the future.  And mostly, I want to publically state how grateful I am to have the things I have.  This blog has often been an epic litany of complaints, but every once in a while, I get a proverbial slap in the face and realize just how good I have it.  I have good and generous friends, a healthy body, money to cover my needs and many of my wants, a good job, a loving family, and so much more.  

So again, thank you, thank you, thank you to those of you who contributed.  Know that your help went to someone who really, truly needed it in ways I couldn't even begin to understand.  Much love and even greater blessings.

 

I’ve been in a reminiscent mood lately.  I’ve been thinking a lot about some of my favorite moments in life…the ones that really stick with you forever.  As I’ve been thinking about that, I realized that, while they may stick with me forever, I’ve never really put them down on “paper.”  There’s no record of my favorite moments.  I don’t really keep a private journal, since there are very few things that I think or feel that I don’t put on my blog.  That, and I just can’t seem to keep up my journal.  So, I decided that I wanted to start committing some of my favorite moments in my life down in a more (semi) permanent format.

These favorite moments aren’t ranked in order of favoriteness, just in the order I happen to choose to write them. 

Matt’s Favorite Moment #1 – Choreographic Styles

I auditioned for the Music Dance Theater program three times at BYU before I got in.  I always got pretty good scores on my voice, and really good scores of my acting, but my dance scores were atrocious.  Really, truly atrocious.  I just wasn’t a very good dancer.  It’s not that I didn’t have dance inside of me, it’s just that I had never danced before.  I had never taken a class.  I had never done a musical that required more than a basic box step. 

When I finally got into the MDT program, I was woefully behind in dance.  I picked up tap dancing (not LAP dancing, Jeff) very quickly, and became extremely proficient at Tap in pretty short order.  But the other forms of dance, especially jazz, modern, and ballet, came very slowly to me, if at all.  I just couldn’t get my body to do what I wanted it to do.  And I really couldn’t get it to do what my Advanced Jazz teacher wanted it to do.  I loved watching dance, and I was extremely jealous of all those really great dancers I was surrounded by on a daily basis, but my body just wouldn’t cooperate. 

On top of that, so much of my dance training was focused on technique, that I never got to experience letting go of technique and just enjoying dance for dance’s sake.  I, to this day, have a notoriously poor memory for dance steps, and I would regularly freak myself right the hell out trying to remember my choreography.  In instances like that, it’s hard to just let yourself go.

My Jr. Year of College, I had to take Choreographic Styles, which was taught by one of my top three favorite teachers of all time, Dave Tinney.  I’ve known a lot of really amazing people in my lifetime, but Dave Tinny is my hero.  He is so disgustingly talented.  (I could go on, but my artistic crush on Dave Tinney will have to be the topic of another blog post.)

Choreographic styles was a unique class.  It wasn’t about technique.  It was about experiencing the amazing dance styles of famous choreographers and then taking those experiences and ideas, and bending them into your own choreographic works. 

The first main project we had to do was to take a famous choreographer, dissect one of their well-known dances, and teach it to the rest of the class.  Kim Nelson and I were assigned Michael Peters, who is best known for choreographing many of Michael Jackson’s more popular works (Thriller, Beat It, etc.)  Pretty much every couple in previous sections of the class assigned Mr. Peters taught Thriller.  What many people didn’t realize is that Michael Peters also choreographed one of the best “bad” movies of all time: Sister Act II.  So, Kim and I decided that we wanted to teach the “Joyful, Joyful” routine from the end of the movie.  It was a blast.  It’s not hard choreography, but for the first time in my life, I actually knew all the steps and I had to show them to someone else, instead of me looking around like I’m lost and asking other people for help.  It was a lot of fun.

The second half of the class, Dave grouped us into pairs and gave us a topic or theme.  We were then supposed to choreograph our own routine to that theme in whatever style we chose.  I was paired with the incomparable Nicole Riding.  Nicole is one of the best singers I’ve ever had the pleasure to listen to, and grew into an absolutely jaw-dropping actress during her time in school.  But I don’t think she’d be mad at me for saying that she wasn’t known for being the best dancer in the program.  Nobody would have mistaken our partnership as the dynastic dance duo of the class.  For the theme of our dance,  Dave selected Macbeth.

Nicole and I worked our butts off on this project.  We eventually settled on the Train song Hopeless off the Drops of Jupiter album, and we opted to use the “Out Damn Spot” speech from Macbeth as the inspiration for the dance.  A guilty woman’s descent into madness.  And then, something just clicked.  For the first time since I had started dancing and taking classes, I got to make up the movement.  Nicole and I spent a long time working out the choreography in class and in the living room of my apartment, and we really liked what we came up with.

On the day we were to present, I wasn’t nervous at all.  I was excited.  I wanted to share our creation with the class.  We taught the movement to the class, and then, as was the custom in the class, the “teachers” for the day sat up front with Dave and helped to grade all of the students in the class on their performance and execution.

It was, to be a little melodramatic, a thrilling experience.  (Look.  I got my degree in musical theater.  What did you expect?  Restraint?)  Nicole and I sat there watching our classmates perform our dance.  I can’t speak for Nicole, but when I saw someone really hit it, it’s like our little group of steps took on a new life.  I learned for the first time how dance could transcend the steps and become something more than itself.  It was, well, thrilling.

After the class was over, we had several people come up to us and say what a great job we had done, including Dave.  Getting praise at all in that program was pretty rare for me (I was rarely brilliant), and due to my insecurities, I drank it up like a man wandering in the desert for days on end without any water.  I wasn’t the best singer, my acting was always weak, and my dance?  Well, we’ve covered that.  But to get praise from someone I respected as much as I respect Dave Tinney meant a lot to me.  And it was the only dance class other than Tap in which I ever earned an A.

Nearly 10 years have elapsed since the time Nicole and I choreographed Macbeth to a song from Train, but I think about that experience often.  And every time the song Hopeless pops up on my Zune, I’m transported back to Room 15 in the KMB, sitting on the floor against the west wall of the studio, my back against the mirror, and watching my classmates, the people with whom I had spent my entire college career, bring something I had created to life. 

When viewed through the lenses of hindsight, I have come to see how influential this experience would be in the way I was to conduct my life.  I learned, during that class, perhaps more than at any other time in my college career, what it means to create.  That class is part of the reason why I still try to write songs, start a novel every couple of years that only lasts about 10 pages, do photography, cook, learn computer programming languages.  I keep trying to find that place where one of my creations takes on a life of its own.  And it’s fun.  It’s fun to have your work be recognized, praised.  It doesn’t happen often, but when it does, it makes a lasting impression.

So, thanks Nicole, for being one of the best project partners I ever had.  And thanks, Dave, for being such an amazing teach and a wonderful, yet completely reluctant, role model.  Choreographic styles is still one of my favorite memories of my college career, and my adult life.

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