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teddyliuwhoā:ā
nuying šĀ [11:02 am] ā [photo] nuying š [11:03 am] ā i dreamt that you were super good at doing push ups and could do them one handed. also you were fluent in spanish
teddy š šŖ [11:05 am] ā nightmare!š® i can do 1 lol teddy š šŖ [11:05 am] ā no spanish, yes taco 𤣠teddy š šŖ [11:06 am] ā now iām hungry
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aniseinthetempleā:
Taejin laughed with delight.Ā āSee, she gets it.ā
Hyojin, who had once mentioned that her husband worked a physical labor job and must be pretty beefy himself, nodded in agreement.Ā āI know most people like to say that they knew their husbands were The One at first sight,ā she said, looking off into the distance as if recalling the memory. āBut that wasnāt how it was like for me and my husband. It took be a bit of time. So I guess you could say I had to shop around first.āĀ
Anise mulled over Nuyingās question.Ā āI guess it depends,ā she said at last,Ā āIf weāre talking about men or women.āĀ
Jinhee was silently sipping his tea, listening to the ladies. He was beanpole thin, and if Anise had to guess, was probably chastised for it for most of his life. He had admitted to her in private that heād taken her course to put on some lean muscle. The beauty conventions for Korean men and German men were different, but in Aniseās time in Seoul, sheād witnessed a trend of Korean men attempting to look like Marvel superheroes. V-shaped torsos and chiseled abs. It was a stark contrast from what had been the previous standard, waifish Flower Boys. But like most aesthetic conventions, it was equally toxic and nearly impossible to achieve unless you happened to win the genetic jackpot.Ā
āIāve been attracted to all types of bodies in the past,ā Anise went on.Ā āI know itās probably not the answer youāre looking for, but I donāt think I have a type. At least not physically. I guess I prefer someone who is active, given thatās such a big part of my own life, but I think that has more to do with the sort of activities I enjoy rather than what I like to look at. Though I suppose those two things arenāt mutually exclusive.āĀ
Anise had a habit of turning what was otherwise a basic question into an abstract discussion. In line with the conversation they were having, she supposed that was another aspect she looked for in a partner: someone she could talk to. Really talk to.Ā
āIs it 50-50?ā Hyojin wanted to know.Ā āYour attraction to men. And women.ā While Hyojin wasnāt old by any stretch (she had recently turned 37), Korea was a stunted nation when it came to topics like gay marriage. While Aniseās European sentiments would never think to extend theĀ ātheyāre old; they just donāt understandā rule towards someone like Hyojin, she knew that Hyojin had grown up in a socially conservative country. Anise would tread carefully, but she would not hide who she was. For all of Madame Heraās faults, even she (who herself was an out and proud lesbian), would never bend the knee to any governmentās limiting policies and beliefs.Ā
āItās not mathematical for me,ā Anise said,Ā āItās more metaphysical. Iāve always liked who I liked, regardless of gender. Attraction has never been a science to me.ā Itās magic, Anise wanted to say.Ā While Madame Hera encouraged her dancers to be open with their sexualities, their statuses as witches were to be kept under wraps.Ā
āThatās nice,ā Jinhee spoke for the first time in a while.Ā āWas itā¦ā he paused, as if trying to decide whether he wanted to go on.Ā āWas it easier to be gay in Germany? Was it easier to date women, I mean.ā
āI donāt really know,ā said Anise.Ā āI left when I was eleven. But Iāve been back multiple times. I have a lot of friends who live in Berlin, and most of them are gay. They seem pretty happy.āĀ
Jinhee nodded with a degree of seriousness that suggested to Anise that his question wasnāt simply polite conversation. She smiled softly.Ā
āI made out with a girl once,ā Taejin blurted,Ā āAt a club.āĀ
There was a brief silence.Ā āThatās nice,ā said Anise, and everyone erupted into laughter.Ā
Nuying nodded, slowly, agreeing with seriousness and clear thought on her face. She perhaps liked the beef, but that was probably because it was Teddy and he was kind and ate well. Those things mattered. He also made her feel like her without trying to be the bestest Nuying. She could just be Nuying, at any level, at any varying level of thought of sense.Ā
But she had indeed seen men that werenāt as beefy, like this tall pale man in perfect suits that she had seen around the clinic. He had a nice face and seemed kind enough with his cats. He seemed to be getting more too. No one that continued to bring home cats was bad. That mattered too.Ā
āI guess I donāt have a type eitherā, she said with a funny sounded half giggle, half cough snort. Her nose scrunched and she grinned.Ā āI like the things that matter to me, and I think that's enough for now, but I just know the list will updateā, she ended lifting her mug to her lips and finishing the contents. She mouthed yum and looked over at the other members of their party, Hyojin smiling at her, Jinhee almost peeking at her but looking away, a small smile on his lips too.
Nuying had never considered women, in terms of attraction. She pushed a mandu into her mouth and listened, watching the faces as she thought and felt it out for herself. She had seen plenty of women that were cute but never thought on it more. She hummed to herself. Maybe she had to meet the right one. It didnāt seem that different than liking a man. As far as she was concerned, both and women and men needed to eat and sleep, needed to brush their teeth and wash their butts.Ā
Aniseās words made all the sense, Nuying was nodding, stuffing her face till she realized the manduās were gone. She motioned for a refill, feeling a little bad for eating the last ones. Liking what you like. It sounded so simple, and it was, but it also wasnāt. There was so much to know if you liked or didnāt.Ā
You just had to know it. Like pistachio, you have to try it to know if you liked it. Taejinās outburst widened Nuyingās eye, a curious grin pushing out over her lips with some playful mischief. She laughed with the others, a happy sound but she really wanted to know more. Maybe she would like girls too. They would probably taste like lip balm. Mild concern grew in the back of Nuyingās mind. Suppose you kiss a girl allergic to the flavour of your lip balm!
āDid you like it?ā Nuying asked with her playful smile. She wanted to ask what she tasted like but stopped herself. But remembered she was wearing strawberry lip balm, very yummy. Maybe she should find someone to kiss and have them taste it too.
Her smile relaxed after a swipe of her lips with her tongue, indeed still strawberry.Ā āMaybe I should start datingā, she said without much thought.Ā āWell after our performance, maybe, to see what tastes good.ā
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aniseinthetempleā:
āIām glad youāre getting something out of it,ā said Anise, with a small nod.Ā āReally. It makes all of this so worth it for me.āĀ
Praise had always settled strangely over Anise. It was not that she didnāt believe the truth of it nor did she hate being told sheād done a good job (did anybody, really?). Rather, it never seemed to fully encompass what she aimed to do here. Her divine undertaking.Ā
Being a professional dancer had always warranted some level of performance, but Anise would give up performing altogether if it meant she could continue sharing the gift of dance for the next century - not that she intended to live that long. Dance had always been a utilitarian art to Anise. It was as serviceable as kitchen utensils, as necessary as breathing. She enjoyed being the vehicle for such practical magic but didnāt necessarily believe that her individual person was wholly necessary in its execution. This was not a case of negativity - in fact, it was quite the opposite. To Anise, there was nothing more wonderful than knowing that she was but one hunk of stardust in a larger cosmic fabric. There was peace in knowing that her work, her mission, would continue long after she was gone.Ā
How to communicate all of that? She had yet to find the right words. Though she had spent evening after evening discussing it with Ludwig, who had expressed that certain things were beyond language. They simply exist. Indescribable, unutterable. Magic was a lot like that.Ā
āWhere are you originally from?ā Hyojin asked her.Ā āI hope you donāt take offense to this, but you donāt strike me as a native Korean woman.ā
Anise couldnāt help but laugh.Ā āNo offense taken. Iām from Kiel, Germany, originally. My father is German and my mother is Korean.ā
āSo what brought you to Korea?ā Taejin wanted to know.Ā
āDance,ā said Anise. It wasnāt a lie but it wasnāt the whole truth either. Thoughts of her motherās snow-covered village infused her mind with incense and winter-time divination.Ā āI was invited to dance with the Delphi company. I could hardly refuse.āĀ
āDo you think youāll stay in Korea permanently?ā Taejin went on, folding her hands beneath her pointed chin.Ā āLike, settle down and start a family here?ā
āIām not sure,ā Anise said.Ā āPerhaps. Iām not married or anything so thatās not exactly something Iāve given much thought to. I think Iād like to start a family, but only when the timing is right. And with the right person, of course.āĀ
āWhat does the right person look like for you?ā Jinhee asked while he refreshed his tea.Ā
āOh, I donāt know. I donāt think Iāve ever thought about it.ā
āWhat?ā Taejin balked.Ā āReally? I think about my dream man all the time. Heād have a body like Cho Guesung and hair like Rocky from Astro.āĀ
Hyojin laughed deeply.Ā āNo thought given to personality?ā
āWell, Iād want him to be nice, of course,ā said Taejin.Ā āBut strong and stoic. A real man, you know?ā She nudged Jinhee with her elbow, causing his eyes to widen in mild shock.Ā āYou got any cute friends you could introduce me to?ā
āWell, none that look like how youāve describedā¦ā
āCome on,ā Taejin went on, throwing a disbelieving glance at all around the table. āI canāt be the only one who thinks about this kind of stuff. Right? Xie? Please back me up here.āĀ
The minute Hyojin asked where Anise was from, Nuyingās mouth clamped on her lip, teeth edging the soft pudgy thing with regret and a bit of embarrassment. Conversation was supposed to be that the give and take, the talk and listen. ListeningĀ Nuying could do, that she could do well, she archived the things she heard like save files and starred them by difficulty. But she was failing at the other part.Ā
For years she talked too much, said the wrong things, her opinions had made her odd and not worthy of friends. She didnāt want that existence; it hurt. No matter how she felt, maybe they had all been right, that maybe she did belong in orbit or on some other planet. A tiny, microscopic part of her said that there had to be someone, or some someones that could understand her, that didn't find her some lost space being.
Until she found them, she continued to fail at conversations, mostly. Instead of being strange, she was just rude, non-engaging, a c and not a f, barely passing.
Her hands made it to her lap, nails pinching the skin between index and thumb. But she still listened. Listened and wondered about the questions too. Would she stay in Korea for the rest of her life, start a family? Her kind of person? Their body?
Somehow peach sweats and a beefy friend floated in her mind. The feel of the lower abdomen and the warmth of two aside her. The solemn definite sulk that existed on her face, eased. Cheeks puffed, lips pushed out, a teeny smirk crept onto the corner of her mouth. A dumpy, she remembered, he said he had a dumpy.
Teddy was probably a lot of peopleās type, with that dumpy and all that beef. He made for good cuddles, he and Songwoo. It was warm and soft, but firm. The smirk had grown, evolved to an actual smile.
She nodded at Taejin, smile growing.Ā āYea big and beefyā, she said before realizing her hands hand relaxed and were in view, making a squishing motion.
Ā āI can see why that would be good. Does feel nice...ā, her voice trailed off, eyes widened, and she looked around their group before letting out a squeak of a chuckle, hands lowering to her lap. She had stared at the cute belly long enough. She totally got it. Cute bellies and bodies, cute smiles and lots of beef.Ā āItās probably good to know what you like huh?ā she asked with real thought going in it.Ā āDo you have to try all the flavours to know?ā She asked then immediately answered herself.Ā āNo, I knew I liked strawberry before I had pistachiosā, she added.Ā āBut I guess you should knowā, she pondered more.Ā āCanāt be bad to know. Itās like making a list to go shopping, itās productive. Anise, do you like the ballerina build or more beef?ā she wondered with a tilt of her head if the beef made them bad dancers. Somehow, she didnāt see Teddy at the barre, going through the positions, but she might like to.
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š¼Źļ½„:* Xie Nuying in actuality
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aniseinthetempleā:
āI teach Intermediate ballet on Monday evenings,ā Anise said,Ā āI think by the end of these six weeks, you should all be ready to advance to the next level no problem.āĀ
She wrapped her hands around her tea-warmed mug, bringing it to her lips and taking a slow sip. The green tea was clean and earthy. She rolled it over her tongue before swallowing.Ā
āI want to bring my toddler in,ā Hyojin said.Ā āGet her started in some ballet classes. Sheās such a bundle of energy. Iām thinking a little exercise might help calm her down.āĀ
āThatās so cute,ā cooed Taejin,Ā āMother-daughter ballerinas!āĀ
āHow old is she?ā Jinhee asked in his quiet voice.
Hyojin was quick to pull up photographs on her phone. She showed them to the table and a chorus of awws and oooohs ensued.Ā āShe turned four last month.āĀ
The conversation carried on about family and where everyone was from. As Anise looked at the faces of her students, she was reminded of the separation that her position necessitated. There was no blatant rule at the academy that she could not fraternize with adult students (hence the reason they were able to go to the teahouse together), but Anise had always maintained a certain professional distance. She loathed the idea that sheād be accused of favoritism, although every teacher had favorites; it was inevitable. The best teachers were able to keep it from coloring their class interactions.Ā
Anise was keenly aware of the power she held by virtue of her being the teacher and they the students. She wanted them to think her friendly; she wanted to spend time together like this outside of the studio, but there would always be a space between them. A gap she would not breach so long as they remained under her tutelage. Typically this was something she performed as effortlessly as breathing, but today it was at the forefront of her mind. A sad sort of loneliness bubbled in the pit of her belly.Ā
She had never considered herself to be lonely. She had plenty of friends and was always busy, but her schedule was occupied almost exclusively by the academy. Her friends were her fellow dancers or her coven sisters (most of which overlapped.) Her life that existed outside of the academy was thin as broth, consisting of short evenings after work or rehearsal when sheād cook herself a humble dinner and get a little knitting in before bed.Ā
āHow about you, Xie?ā Taejin asked Nuying,Ā āWhere is your family from?āĀ
Cute kids in smaller, cuter outfits. Nuying grinned at the sight of Hyojinās kids. Grinned and told her she made little angels; cause kids were innocent Kids and all that. A small voice said she should have had two by then. It was her motherās; the disappointment was rattling. Her eyes opened wide as if she was there. A sip of her tea and warriorās strength shoved the voice down. She wasnāt as easy to surrender to a woman so far away.Ā
Within her smiles and drinking, tasting of the snacks, she let the present alone matter. Cute mini ballerinas, cute mom and daughter ballerinas. She had to enjoy this moment. It was world building. Her world, building her world where she can be just as much her as she could be.Ā
Since Halloween she had felt that she needed to build her own world, reach out and live more, without any of the questions about the happiness it would give her. She had been in Korea too long without it. She had been living like an alien whoās communications device was broken, alone, locked in her room, scared of doing and saying the wrong thing. Yet for that night she became a sailor scout, covered in glitter under a purple moon, drunk and happy with friends, there for anotherās sadness, a hero in pink. She could see her own world coming to view under the glitter and pink.
Ā All away from Xiamen.Ā
Her cheeks filled with air, heading tilting as her hometown came into mind, like a test on her resolve to live free.Ā āXiamen, Chinaā, she answered with a nod.Ā āItās one thousand six hundred and eighty one kilometers from hereā, she added with a little giggle. She did know the exact distance.Ā āIt has a nice beach, smaller than Seoul but not too small. Itās prettyā, she said thinking of the lighter things, avoiding bad memories like goombas on the track.Ā āI think my family has always lived thereā, she said looking down at the table then up, passing over the faces before her.Ā Ā āWell no, I have some aunts who live in the north but I think we all like the pace in Xiamen, except me maybe since I am here nowā, she said then laughed.Ā āI came here for work,ā she offered, fingers passing the rim of the mug.Ā āIāve always wanted to be veterinarian in a medium sized city. Coming here fulfilled that dream.ā
She smiled.Ā āAnd soon I shall be a great ballerina, added bonusā, she smiled more, lifting her mug like a prize before setting it down, Taejin laughing with her.Ā āI realize how happy this class has made me. Iām really glad I did it. And Iām glad we had you for a teacher, Anise. Youāve been amazing.ā
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aniseinthetempleā:
Anise watched Nuying disappear down the street, turning to go when she was no more than a speck of color against the glow of the street lamps. Ludwig swooped lower.Ā
One of your students? The corvid inquired.Ā
Yes, said Anise.Ā
Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā š®šŖšÆšæ
Each of Aniseās seven students returned for the following class that Friday. And then again on the twelfth and sixteenth. She was impressed - usually by the second week, sheād lose at least one pupil who realized ballet wasnāt for them, or something would come up and students would start missing classes intermittently. But, for the first two weeks at least, they had maintained their commitment with smiles and determined creases in their brows.
Halfway through their fifth class on the nineteenth, Anise noticed the shift. Itās what she called the pivotal change in her beginner dancers.Ā Itās when the moves became less foreign to them, less difficult to assume. Their bodies had decided to cooperate at last. This was the point at which she began pushing them harder, confident that they could handle it.
They spent a significant amount of time on the floor practicing move combinations. She was now teaching them a proper routine, which they would go on to perform at their graduation at the six week mark. Anise kept to the standard base routine that she guided all of her six-week session students through, but inevitably, she would end up altering it significantly, playing up the strengths of her dancers. Every performance was different and special.Ā
Hera had been nagging her to include magic in these sessions, a relatively new suggestion. Anise wasnāt convinced it was such a good idea, but she kept it to herself, only allowing it to enter her mind when she was a considerable distance from the High Priestess. It was not that Anise was against the use of magic during classes on principle, but rather the manner of magic Hera was insisting she use. She wanted to siphon their kinetic energy to utilize in later rituals; she claimed it would be used for the protection of all those who walked the academy halls, including the students whose energy theyād be borrowing, but it didnāt sit right with Anise. She flatly refused. Fortunately, it was low on Heraās priority list, and as a result, she had not been reprimanded for her deliberate disobedience of orders.
Class concluded with heavy breaths and foreheads shiny with sweat. This was by far the most difficult session sheād given them, and her heart swelled with pride at their perseverance. She suggested they all go out for a celebratory evening cup of tea, to which four of the seven students agreed. They left the academy after changing out of dance clothes and powdering noses, and followed Anise to a quaint teashop a couple blocks down the road.Ā
They entered the Japanese-style teashop and removed their shoes. The shopās elderly Japanese owner greeted Anise like a granddaughter and led her party to a long Chabudai table. Anise thanked the woman and sat on a cushion at the middle, with Nuying to her left and a middle-aged woman named Hyojin to her right. The other two students sat across from them: Jinhee, a shy young man, and Taejin, a college girl with blunt bangs.
āThat was a tough class,ā Hyojin said.Ā āI was sweating like a pig the entire time.ā
āThatās just your ballet baptism,ā said Anise,Ā āYouāre all officially one of us now. And thereās no turning back.āĀ
āIāve got blisters on my feet,ā remarked Taejin.
Jinhee nodded.Ā āMe too.āĀ
āTheyāll callus over, donāt worry,ā Anise said.Ā āOr maybe do? I donāt know how much pride you take in your feetās appearance, but Iāll tell you this, ballerinas have notoriously busted feet.ā She laughed.Ā āSorry, not great conversation to have when weāre about to eat.ā On cue, the elderly woman returned with an ornate pot of fragrant green tea. A man - her son - placed a plate of snacks on the table: yokan, manju, and senbei.Ā
Like Clay. Nuying had clung to Aniseās words that cold day, as a reminder when her muscles yelled, when she questioned why she was even doing it, and when it took more effort to make it feel right, fit right, to even be right in the instructorās knowing eyes. She was clay, and she could do it. She was a little almost ballerina.
The following classes did try that resolve, threatened to transfigure her from clay to mush. Many classes Nuying went home to lay on the floor and stare at the ceiling. She took baths with special recommended addons shared by members in their class and the wide web, ebsom salt, lavender, aloe. It was hard, she told Niamh that. She texted her that her arms and legs were gonna turn to soup fall off with six crying cat stickers before she went to bed. When she woke up and practiced the combination again, it felt better, she followed up with superhero stickers and returned strength. Clay.
It had been like that. Moments where she felt for sure she couldnāt do it and then she did, all while theyāre instructor watched and smiled, proud of her little baby almost ballerinas. They had bonded, like a heroine group preparing for nationals against all odds. Lots of sweat and up-tempo music, ponytails and stretches. It was almost the best part of the show. She told herself that and smiled, reminding herself they would get through it.
Nuying looked over the gathered women before thinking of her feet, and glancing down for a quick second. Blisters. The idea stretched her lips into a mix of concern and terror mixed with a duck. It was hard enough working, being on call, while sore from dancing. Its why the soaks were important, she nodded to herself.Ā āI like the idea of cute feet butā, she said wiggling her toes in her seated position, āThese are now warriorās feet now, I guessā, she said making Jinhee nod with a smile.Ā
Nuying lowered her head in thanks to the serving of the tea then scanned the tea pot, sensible but beautiful, probably structured for a proper pour, not a fictional mythical creature.Ā āManjuā, she said as the Hyojin reached for one. She set one before Nuying and she smiled a big happy smile. Food made the very thought of the aches vanish.
āYou know, even as hard as that class was. It was funā, she grinned.Ā āI may take the other session as well. What about you?ā she asked the others, then reached for the teapot, pouring the yummy smelling tea first into Aniseās cup for.Ā āDo you teach it as well, Anise?ā she asked before pouring for the other girls.Ā
Taejin was shaking her head asking if she liked punishment. Nuying pushed out her lips and laughed.
Maybe.
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aniseinthetempleā:
*
The soft caw of a raven pierced the night air. Anise turned her gaze to the sky, catching sight of Ludwig swooping overheard, keeping a safe distance to avoid suspicion. His gleaming wings caught the moonlight, making sleek black feathers appear purple. Iām here, he said without words. She returned her focus to Nuying.
āYouāll get used to it,ā Anise said, procuring a hand-knitted scarf from her puffer bag and winding it around her neck. āOur bodies are quite malleable that way. Like clay. Everybodyās different, and some people are more built for certain things than others, but I really do believe that with practice, almost anything can become second nature.āĀ
Anise smiled warmly at the second question, tucking her chilly fingers into the armpits of her Uniqlo jumper. Sheād forgotten her mittens at home. āWell, actually, youāve learned all the basic positions already. Everything after this is sort of ornamental, a combination of all the forms we practiced today. Weāll continue work at mastering the basics, but weāll begin learning more elevated stuff too. You know, like spins and floor poses. They might seem daunting at first, but it really is great fun.āĀ
They came to a halt at a split in the road, one direction leading to a row of restaurants - a couple ramen shops, a chicken and beer place, a Chinese spot that served delicious Peking duck - and the other to a residential street. āIām that way,ā Anise jerked her thumb toward the line of humble but fairly well-to-do apartments. āWhat direction are you heading?ā
āClayā, she repeated then dangled her arms. She always thought she was flesh and blood, bones and ligaments, but maybe she was also clay. Her brain was definitely clay. She had seen it accomplish much through her trying her hardest.Ā āYeaā, she nodded, āI believe thatā, she added, tossing the bag with her shoes into her canvas then pulling on the wool coat. She nodded, thinking further on what the body could do, what her body would learn to do.Ā
Spins and poses and what she imagined made the ballerinas even more fairylike, she would learn that next. She planned on going home and looking at herself and repeating the poses. The strangeness would fade the more she saw it. She was clay, so none of it could really be that strange. She was being molded.Ā
She looked up at the road then pulled her phone from the pocket of her coat.Ā āI need to pick up some ingredients for dinner. I planned on making a dumpling soup. Itās nice on a cold day. Iām heading the other wayā, she said then gave Anise a bow before wishing her a good evening. She waved then headed down the street, pulling her coat closed.
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aniseinthetempleā:
Anise proceeded with ronde de jambes and adagios, pleasantly stirred by each of her studentsā dedication. Thatās not to say that those who enrolled in the six-week course didnāt usually give it their all, but it was clear that this class was special. This was a promising sign. Despite the fact that it was only the first session, Aniseās intuition told her that it would be one of the best she had ever taught.
They ran through all of the foundation moves, introducing them to each of the dancerās physiques. She didnāt force their bodies into the exact positions, but she did adjust them to ensure they werenāt straining or assuming improper form. The preliminary lesson was spent familiarizing them with moves that, if they hadnāt been dancing for as long as she had, would have feltĀ abnormal to their limbs.
The seven students were pink-cheeked and heaving heavy breaths by the end of class, but the endorphins were rushing, and she was delighted to see that nearly every one of them had a beaming smile on their face. Anise lingered in the small antechamber outside the studio, where bags and coats were kept in wooden cubbies. She spoke with each of her students as they changed into street shoes and pulled fuzzy jumpers over their heads, trying to gauge their sentiments about the class and making conversation about what they planned to do with their night.
Appropriately dressed for the weather, six of the seven students made their way down the corridor and disappeared into the lobby. Nuying was the last to remain, and Anise waited for her to finish packing up. āHow did you find the class?ā asked Anise. The academy was winding down for the evening, and Aniseās fellow dancers and other staff were the only ones left roaming its grand halls.
Ballerinas were something else. They werenāt just fairies plopping around in cute outfits. Not that was how Nuying saw them, not all the time. She had seen a few ballet productions with her family. Her father loved performances and wanted that for the kids. Most of the time that meant the traditional arts but on occasion he let the global influence into the house. There Nuying met the ballerina and how they made each move look beautiful and effortless.
It was beautiful, but not effortless. Her limbs and muscles were sire of that, unfamiliar in every posture. The ballerinas were strong and hardworking. One class made that clear. But she wanted to see it through. She could do it, she just felt she really could.
Plus she wasnāt exactly going to be in a professional show, right. Just learning the basics. Throwing her longline cardigan over her shoulders and donning a hat, Nuyingās mind wondered out to chilled streets, mapping her journey home. Aniseās voice brought her back inside. She smiled.Ā āIt was hard but I liked it. Itās nice telling yourself you can do something you know wonāt be easyā, she answered then zipped close the cotton bag that held her dance shoes.
āI think I will have to practice the positions properly at home. They feel so weird in my head. I have to tell my body its notā, she said then laughed. It was like most things she grew in to, she had to talk herself into.Ā āWill we be learning new positions and skills next class? Or just mastering these we went through today?ā
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aniseinthetempleā:
āOh, wow,ā said Anise, āyou have good body control. Some people show up, and youād think theyāve never used their arms and legs before. Usually, overcoming this is the first obstacle.ā As she spoke, she undid her hair from its loose bun, which had begun to unwind during class. She re-twisted it into a sturdy topknot. The white front strands hung loosely around her face.
āLetās see⦠I started taking ballet lessons at sixteen and have been dancing professionally for going on fourteen years now.ā She explained. āSo Iād say forever is a fair assessment. It certainly feels like forever to me.ā Anise balanced a hand on her leotard-clad hip, her skirtās diaphanous chiffon fluttering with the light motion. āI always teach the winter ballet series. Itās a blessing for me. I see some of the same faces in the drop-in classes, but the six-week series really allows me to watch you guys grow, which is what I love.ā
āI really am thrilled youāve decided to join,ā she went on, clasping her hands together in a show of genuine joy. āBy the end of the six weeks, our small group always feels like a little family. Itās going to be great fun.ā
Anise summoned her dancers back to the barre and began a series of plies. As she counted out their movements in a steady 5-6-7-8 rhythm, the piano music tapped on in hearty staccato. She had them do demi-plies in first position, carrying their arms through elegant port de bras. She demonstrated the moves and then walked around to adjust her studentās forms. āThese are minute movements,ā said Anise, ābut I promise you will all be feeling it in your thighs tomorrow."Ā She guided Nuying into a lower squat.
Nuying smiled more. She felt proud, it itched inside her cheeks and had her shoulder raising. She felt so warm. She wondered when she learned this skill that made her earn this complement. She thought over her daily life and just knew it wasn't the amount of time spent at her gaming computer nor on any of her gaming consoles. She thought of work and nodded.Ā āIt must be working with animalsā, she thought aloud. āToo many big movements can scare and make the vet visits scary. I hate seeing them scared.ā To think her love for animals blessed with her such a thing.Ā
Her smile would stamp itself on her face forever, she could just feel it.Ā
She nodded, following what the instructor said. From sixteen. That was a long time. But she was doing what she loved. That was important. Nuying understood hard work for what you loved.Ā āYouāre very good and itās great to see someone doing what you can tell they love. I think people can sometimes tell when you love your workā, she pondered taking in how her clothes suited her. She was the real deal. A real dancer, a real ballerina.Ā
It was all so pretty. Somehow she reminded her of Tinkerbelle. It must be the skirt. Suited her better than Nuyingās version. Maybe because she was meant for it and Nuying was just beginning and passing by, borrowing its cute for a while.
The break ended and Nuying took her space back with the others. There she watched Anise show them how to set themselves for the next movements. Feet pointed out, ankles touching, she glanced down to verify if her little feet looked like Aniseās. Sorta. She adjusted her left a bit then followed the motion, body lowering, knees bending, thighs separating, making a diamond space between the legs. She held the shape in her head, but it didnāt feel right.
Aniseās assistance brought her lower, air puffed her cheeks out to hold in the could be squeal. The diamond shape felt less tilted with her help.Ā BallerinasĀ were strong, she thought, lifting her arms. Her fingers didnāt feel as beautiful as Aniseās had looked so she turned her thumb in, trying to relax how they felt all while remembering the feeling in the adjusted squat. Ballerinas were focused too, she thought.Ā
The motions look easy, but they didnāt feel it. So many little parts to make it look that way. Since sixteen, she thought again. Wow.
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aniseinthetempleā:
les deux ballerines
When: December 5, 2022 / 7:00 PM Where: the Delphi Dance Academy
The budding dancers filed one by one into the studio, the sprung subfloor rasping amicably beneath stocking feet. (No street shoes on the Marley.) The creak of the hardwood evoked dry kindling popping in a fireplace, and Anise could not help but imagine a flower of flame pirouetting in an open hearth. But instead of the rich smokey smell of a bonfire, the studio was full of the lemony fresh scent of floor polish and Tiger Balm.
Anise introduced herself to her intimate class of seven, acquiring each of their names in turn, and instructed them to slip on their ballet shoes. The unblemished canvas wouldĀ accumulate evidence of wear over the course of the next six weeks, a badge of their advancement.Ā
They began with a bouncy stretch to Nina Simoneās My Baby Just Cares For Me. It was the song she always used to warm up. Nina poured all her affection, all her light-hearted joy, all the gaiety of being in love and loved in return, and the result was uncomplicated jubilation. It was a come-as-you-are kind of love melody.
āThe main thing,ā Anise said as the song concluded. The track switched to Astrud Gilbertoās delicately sexy rendition of The Girl From Ipanema.Ā āis that you let your mind be free of assumptions. While ballet technique can be arbitrary and difficult, at its core, dance is about joy and expression. And thereās no point if itās not joyful. Good dancers are good because of their technique. Great dancers are great because of their passion.ā
āAfter all, weāre not training for Swan Lake. Iāll teach you the fundamentals of ballet, but it is up to you to determine what you want to gain from this class. Ballet is a fantastical world full of magic and enchantment, beauty, and romance. With our bodies, weāre writing poetry. So, for the next six weeks, all I ask is that you write your own poem.ā
Anise led her dancers to the barre, guiding them through foot articulations with increasing tempo: one in four counts, one in two counts, and two in one count. They repeated this sequence with the opposite foot. Parallel tendus to the front, three tendu lowers and flexes, two regular tendus. She assisted them into first position, followed by side stretching and a brief balance in relevĆ©. Anise walked along the row of students, adjusting their bodies with eagle-eyed precision and great gentleness.Ā Staccato piano plopped like heavy drops of rain.Ā
A short break followed. Anise approached one of the dancers in her class, a small, raven-haired young woman with a demeanor that called to mind sunshine and the merry sound of mandolins. Her name was Nuying. Anise remembered because she had introduced herself so blithely. The bright smile with which sheād delivered her name made Anise like her immediately. āBeautiful barre work,ā Anise said. āHave you taken dance classes before?āĀ
The trend of New Yearās resolution was something Nuying had no real interest in adapting but had a curiosity around the topic kinda like cats with bubble wrap. She didnāt want it on her but would poke at it. Yea, it was too early to put one into practice, the general idea behind it made her more curious. In Nuyingās fuzzy cat shaped mind, the idea of doing something new that could be fun as a way of bettering herself, well that seemed fine.
Most people took to the idea for excersize and Nuying lifted big dogs all day, she was fluffing buff. That and she hiked for miles on the tunes of that one NCT song that stuck in her head because she stayed too long in that keychain store and the manager kept restarting it to sing along.
When she saw the poster for dance lessons, dance lessons for beginners, it really sounded fun. Plus the poster was cute, very nice colours. She was probably not the ideal market intended, well, no. The more she thought about it, she probably was. She was won by pastels; it was fool proof.Ā
Dressed as recommended by the staff when she signed up, hair braided back, and in a lose bun, she was present and kinda excited to see how she could do. She introduced herself with that excitement, beating up all possible negative talk. She was doing this. It would be fun. She would be great. She would show Niamh some nice moves later. That made her grin wide.
So she bounced along with the instructor, ready to be great and have fun. She listened carefully, followed the instructions and moved her body in ways she had never, and never thought of. But it moved. Her body was not a stick that would snap, nor was she planted, she could move in the directed steps. It wasnāt perfect but she was doing it.
How cool was she.
The instructor even complimented her. Nuyingās cheeks rose so high when she smiled and thanked her.Ā āNo, never. I use to play around with traditional dances with kids in my hometown for festivals, but itās nothing like this. But itās funā, she said smiling. She thanked her again, feeling proud she was doing well. What a nice feeling.
āYou must have been dancing forever. You explain it very calmly. Thank you again. My brain gets it. Will you teach all the sessions?ā
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Educational chart
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snow friends :*)
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