Tuesday, 4 February 2014
Brave work with the Eloquent Body
http://blog.petflow.com/this-is-so-touching-everyone-should-watch-this-at-least-once/
Tuesday, 10 December 2013
Dance With Suitcase
I am very pleased to announce that Dance With Suitcase: A Memoir resting on Movement is out, and in your real and online book stores. You can also order the book from me at dawn.garisch@gmail.com.
“So, there’s this suitcase. If I were the choreographer
of my life, in the planning stages before anything had
happened, or else at the end when all is done, and
nothing can be altered, I would begin with that. Start
with a bare stage, except for a large, cardboard case,
the kind my father used while travelling in Africa on
business, with a big enough cavity for a dancer to
scrunch up in. The first problem would be
claustrophobia; then how to emerge, how to step
outside the confine.”
The memoir is a companion piece to Eloquent Body, looking at how dance practice can help us manage our lives. It also focuses on how we move through the world.
“So, there’s this suitcase. If I were the choreographer
of my life, in the planning stages before anything had
happened, or else at the end when all is done, and
nothing can be altered, I would begin with that. Start
with a bare stage, except for a large, cardboard case,
the kind my father used while travelling in Africa on
business, with a big enough cavity for a dancer to
scrunch up in. The first problem would be
claustrophobia; then how to emerge, how to step
outside the confine.”
The memoir is a companion piece to Eloquent Body, looking at how dance practice can help us manage our lives. It also focuses on how we move through the world.
Answering the question: What is this really about? can be the hardest aspect of writing memoir, perhaps because it carries the weight of that potentially terrifying question: What is my life really about? In Dance With Suitcase, it took me several drafts to realise that I was investigating freedom and limitation, desire and restraint, as they have shaped me.
Thursday, 5 December 2013
Monday, 16 September 2013
Sunday, 1 September 2013
Our Imprisoned Images
I am giving a talk at the Body Knowledge Conference (2 - 4 September) organised by WISER at WITS on The Image in the Symptom. This lovely quote by Rilke sums it up:
Work of the eyes is done, now
go and do heart-work
on all the images imprisoned within you; for you
overpowered them: but even now you don't know them.
- Rainer Maria Rilke from: Turning Point
Work of the eyes is done, now
go and do heart-work
on all the images imprisoned within you; for you
overpowered them: but even now you don't know them.
- Rainer Maria Rilke from: Turning Point
Saturday, 20 July 2013
Henry Miller on Life, Dancing and Surrender.
- From Brain Pickings:
Henry Miller begins with a riff on Howe’s book War Dance:
The art of living is based on rhythm — on give and take, ebb and flow, light and dark, life and death. By acceptance of all aspects of life, good and bad, right and wrong, yours and mine, the static, defensive life, which is what most people are cursed with, is converted into a dance, ‘the dance of life,’ metamorphosis. One can dance to sorrow or to joy; one can even dance abstractly. … But the point is that, by the mere act of dancing, the elements which compose it are transformed; the dance is an end in itself, just like life. The acceptance of the situation, any situation, brings about a flow, a rhythmic impulse towards self-expression. To relax is, of course, the first thing a dancer has to learn. It is also the first thing a patient has to learn when he confronts the analyst. It is the first thing any one has to learn in order to live. It is extremely difficult, because it means surrender, full surrender.[…]Life, as we all know, is conflict, and man, being part of life, is himself an expression of conflict. If he recognizes the fact and accepts it, he is apt, despite the conflict, to know peace and to enjoy it. But to arrive at this end, which is only a beginning (for we haven’t begun to live yet!), a man has got to learn the doctrine of acceptance, that is, of unconditional surrender, which is love.
Tuesday, 9 July 2013
The Worried Sick
Interesting article on the nocebo effect...
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/36126/title/Worried-Sick/
http://www.the-scientist.com/?articles.view/articleNo/36126/title/Worried-Sick/
Saturday, 1 June 2013
Doctor / writer Karen Hitchcock
Thanks Bridget Thompson for pointing this doctor / writer out to me. Thought-provoking, well-written, humane and hilarious articles about the problems of the contemporary approach to health care, e.g.:
https://www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2012/july/1341560637/karen-hitchcock/last-resort
https://www.themonthly.com.au/issue/2012/july/1341560637/karen-hitchcock/last-resort
Thursday, 30 May 2013
Thursday, 25 April 2013
The Aroma of Spring
Amazing man - John Parker. These changes are happening in my lifetime...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?
Tuesday, 23 April 2013
Online Interview with Anthea Garman
Anthea has a wonderful blog Writing Across Genres. Check it out.
http://writexgenres.wordpress.com/dialogues/dialogue-with-dawn-strengthening-the-spirit-of-my-writing/
http://writexgenres.wordpress.com/dialogues/dialogue-with-dawn-strengthening-the-spirit-of-my-writing/
Tuesday, 16 April 2013
Poetry writing workshop at the FynArts Festival
I will be running a three day poetry writing workshop in Hermanus as part of their new cultural festival. Monday 10th to Wednesday 12th June. Get out your pencils and join me...
http://www.hermanusfynarts.co.za/
http://www.hermanusfynarts.co.za/
Monday, 8 April 2013
Oliver Sacks on Memory
What a lovely man and role model. I am reviewing his latest book "Hallucinations', which is fascinating reading. http://www.brainpickings.org/index.php/2013/02/04/oliver-sacks-on-memory-and-plagiarism/
Tuesday, 12 March 2013
A Tough Language
‘When people say that poetry is a luxury, or an option, or
for the educated middle classes, or that it should not be read at school
because it is irrelevant, or any of the strange and stupid things that are said
about poetry and its place in our lives, I suspect that the people doing the
saying have had things pretty easy. A tough life needs a tough language – and that
it what poetry is. That is what literature offers – a language powerful enough
to say it how it is.
It isn’t a hiding place, it is a finding place.’
Jeanette Winterson, from Why Be Happy When You Could Be
Normal?
Wednesday, 13 February 2013
Dance Project with Bettie Coetzee Lambrecht
This collaboration, where I danced some of my poems for Bettie's camera, was a rich experience, and has resulted in a book: To Life; Dance It. The current trend towards an interdisciplinary approach to art and life can help us understand each other and ourselves better.
http://www.facebook.com/bettie.coetzeelambrecht/timeline/story?ut=32&wstart=1359705600&wend=1362124799&hash=594915223856875&pagefilter=3&ustart=1
The book and prints of the photographs can be ordered from Bettie: bcbrecht
Tuesday, 12 February 2013
The Bird Novel
I have come to think of birds as the original anti-depressant. A friend posted the following to me today, which just about sums it up, and more. The review is about writing, keeping what is important alive, and having a reference point outside the narcissistic world of human beings:
http://www.thesmartset.com/article/article08221202.aspx
Monday, 14 January 2013
Memoir writing course in Cape Town Feb 2013
The next memoir writing course is from February 25th to March 1st 2013, mornings 9am to 1pm. For more information, please email dawn.garisch@gmail.com.
Thursday, 27 December 2012
FOR THOSE OF US WITH DAMAGED SIGHT
Monet Refuses the Operation
http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/236810
Sunday, 16 December 2012
Review from Goodreads
This is not a book easily categorised. A non-fiction book, yes. Part memoir, yes. Part medical observances, yes. Then there is poetry and musing on how we live life - both socially, politically, career-wise and in the family. What I would not call it, is a self-help book. Yet, it may help. But no, the book does not strive to solve all your life's problems. Nor will it.
Over the course of the year I have had to come to terms that my health problems are not curable. At least two of them are chronic conditions. Chronic - it will not end until I do. What I had to finally say to myself is, 'I will not live in fear.' To stop worrying how bad it will be later. This is very different from living in denial or some fantasy land where all is happy-go-lucky. One needs to do today what one can to ensure the body works as best it can in the future. This means being aware of the condition, the options to manage it and making sure life is - as best one can - lived to cause minimal harm. But one must still live. And one must not sit and stew, creating horrific scenarios playing 'what if.' Practical - fine. But spending too much time worrying that someday I may be unable to write / walk - or whatever - is only going to make living today harder.
Neither condition is like breaking a bone. There is no perfect manual that says, 'If X happens, do Y.' It is more of guessing game between PT, medicine and making changes in my day-to-day life. Nor does the PT and meds always 'work' the way we thought they would. There is this fine line we all walk, trying to make things better and not worse. Sometimes something looks promising and actually turns out to be a poor choice. Learning as we go, while still trying to live a life.
Having others in my life respect my new boundaries and being willing to help or work within my boundaries is helpful.
What does not help is people telling me to 'not give up hoping for a cure.' The cure will be discovered or not regardless if I hope for one. Right now I'm busy figuring out how to open a can or get my groceries loaded into the car. Or how to type out my thoughts. Practical suggestions in these matters ARE helpful (like the person who reminded me that there IS the invention called an electric can opener). Hoping for a cure does not actually DO anything, nor does it make it any more or less likely for a cure to be discovered.
Nor do I have patience for those who ask me me to be grateful for my current state. I am, however, grateful the author addressed this - especially the load of crap heaped on cancer patients as if their 'negative attitude' CAUSED cancer.
The author also has a chronic condition. What I took away from her words is a woman trying to learn to live with her body. That her body is also linked to her mind, and the two co-exist together. What happens to one can impact the other - but not necessarily 'cure' each other. There needs to an understanding so one can live - keep mentally sane - while also an acceptance that THIS is the body you live with. There are unknowns. There are question marks hanging over the body's future. How we mentally deal with this unknown - like the unknowns in all aspects of life - will dictate how well a person lives each day.
This is not an advocacy to plaster smiles / stiff upper lip / deny anything is wrong. In fact, the author is very honest about emotion, including the small sorrow that she felt when her project - this book - was at its conclusion. She brings out the imagery of a dance - the mind and body learning to move out of respect of one another. To be give the self space to morn / grieve - yet also not to wallow.
Such fine lines. We like things put in sound bites: Be positive! Exercise is healthy! Work hard!
The truth, however, does not fit so neatly into slogans. Which is perhaps why I am rambling rather than describing this book.
What I do know is this: I read many, many books - more than I even bother to list on goodreads. There are books that I enjoy, but never loan or buy for another because I can not easily pin-point people I know in my life who are a good match for that book. Then there are books that while I read them names of people who also NEED this book keep popping into my head. I have already bought two copies of this book. I easily see myself giving this to three more people. Not loaning - because I visualise them wanting their own to lend to others. I look forward to hearing what bits intrigued others. I am sure there will be many differing responses. As for me - I've got over 30 stickies peeping out from the pages.
It is that kind of book.
- Tiah Beautement
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